ROMay 15, 2025Code
Evaluating Robustness of Deep Reinforcement Learning for Autonomous Surface Vehicle Control in Field TestsLuis F. W. Batista, Stéphanie Aravecchia, Seth Hutchinson et al.
Despite significant advancements in Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) for Autonomous Surface Vehicles (ASVs), their robustness in real-world conditions, particularly under external disturbances, remains insufficiently explored. In this paper, we evaluate the resilience of a DRL-based agent designed to capture floating waste under various perturbations. We train the agent using domain randomization and evaluate its performance in real-world field tests, assessing its ability to handle unexpected disturbances such as asymmetric drag and an off-center payload. We assess the agent's performance under these perturbations in both simulation and real-world experiments, quantifying performance degradation and benchmarking it against an MPC baseline. Results indicate that the DRL agent performs reliably despite significant disturbances. Along with the open-source release of our implementation, we provide insights into effective training strategies, real-world challenges, and practical considerations for deploying DRLbased ASV controllers.
39.5ROMay 4
Sim-to-Real Transfer and Robustness Evaluation of Reinforcement Learning Control with Integrated Perception on an ASV for Floating Waste CaptureLuis F. W. Batista, Stéphanie Aravecchia, Cédric Pradalier
Autonomous surface vessels for floating-waste removal operate under varying hydrodynamics, external disturbances, and challenging water-surface perception. We present a field-validated system that combines camera-based polarimetric perception with a lightweight DRL-based controller for floating-waste detection and capture. Camera detections are converted into water-surface target points and tracked by a controller trained entirely in simulation and deployed directly on a retrofitted ASV platform. Our main contribution is a sim-to-real testing methodology that combines a two-stage simulation protocol with a perception abstraction module designed to mimic real camera behavior, enabling reproducible field trials and explicit evaluation of the sim-to-real gap. We apply this framework in matched simulation and field experiments across 14 disturbance regimes to expose failure modes and evaluate robustness. The results show centimeter-level terminal accuracy and indicate robust control performance under the evaluated perturbation regimes. The main source of degradation is insufficient actuation-model fidelity. We also demonstrate the system in a search-and-capture application using real camera detections in real-world conditions over areas of up to $450~m^2$. The study distills practical lessons for reliable transfer, including improved actuation-model fidelity, targeted domain randomization, and careful management of latency and timestamps across modules, while highlighting remaining challenges.
RONov 8, 2019
Building an Aerial-Ground Robotics System for Precision Farming: An Adaptable SolutionAlberto Pretto, Stéphanie Aravecchia, Wolfram Burgard et al.
The application of autonomous robots in agriculture is gaining increasing popularity thanks to the high impact it may have on food security, sustainability, resource use efficiency, reduction of chemical treatments, and the optimization of human effort and yield. With this vision, the Flourish research project aimed to develop an adaptable robotic solution for precision farming that combines the aerial survey capabilities of small autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) with targeted intervention performed by multi-purpose unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs). This paper presents an overview of the scientific and technological advances and outcomes obtained in the project. We introduce multi-spectral perception algorithms and aerial and ground-based systems developed for monitoring crop density, weed pressure, crop nitrogen nutrition status, and to accurately classify and locate weeds. We then introduce the navigation and mapping systems tailored to our robots in the agricultural environment, as well as the modules for collaborative mapping. We finally present the ground intervention hardware, software solutions, and interfaces we implemented and tested in different field conditions and with different crops. We describe a real use case in which a UAV collaborates with a UGV to monitor the field and to perform selective spraying without human intervention.
CVOct 28, 2019
Image-Based Place Recognition on Bucolic Environment Across Seasons From Semantic Edge DescriptionAssia Benbihi, Stéphanie Aravecchia, Matthieu Geist et al.
Most of the research effort on image-based place recognition is designed for urban environments. In bucolic environments such as natural scenes with low texture and little semantic content, the main challenge is to handle the variations in visual appearance across time such as illumination, weather, vegetation state or viewpoints. The nature of the variations is different and this leads to a different approach to describing a bucolic scene. We introduce a global image descriptor computed from its semantic and topological information. It is built from the wavelet transforms of the image semantic edges. Matching two images is then equivalent to matching their semantic edge descriptors. We show that this method reaches state-of-the-art image retrieval performance on two multi-season environment-monitoring datasets: the CMU-Seasons and the Symphony Lake dataset. It also generalises to urban scenes on which it is on par with the current baselines NetVLAD and DELF.