83.1ROApr 27
INHerit-SG: Incremental Hierarchical Semantic Scene Graphs with RAG-Style RetrievalYukTungSamuel Fang, Zhikang Shi, Jiabin Qiu et al.
Driven by recent advancements in foundation models, semantic scene graphs have emerged as a promising paradigm for high-level 3D environmental abstraction in robot navigation. However, existing frameworks struggle to successfully handle complex embodied queries while ensuring continuous semantic graph construction. To address these limitations, we present INHerit-SG, an asynchronous dual-stream architecture that systematically structures the 3D environment into a RAG-ready knowledge base. Specifically, our framework integrates comprehensive node representations, an event-triggered asynchronous update scheme, and a structured retrieval mechanism. While geometric segmentation is decoupled from semantic reasoning to maintain mapping efficiency, the semantic nodes also store natural language summaries to support text-based retrieval. Furthermore, we propose an interpretable retrieval pipeline that couples the reasoning capabilities of multi-role LLMs with the topological structure of the scene graph, followed by a visual verification process to mitigate false positives. We evaluate INHerit-SG on a newly constructed benchmark for complex embodied semantic query retrieval, HM3DSem-SQR, and in real-world environments. Experiments demonstrate that our system achieves state-of-the-art performance on complex queries, especially for those involving negations and chained spatial constraints. Project Page: https://fangyuktung.github.io/INHeritSG.github.io/
ROFeb 13, 2025
AT-Drone: Benchmarking Adaptive Teaming in Multi-Drone PursuitYang Li, Junfan Chen, Feng Xue et al.
Adaptive teaming-the capability of agents to effectively collaborate with unfamiliar teammates without prior coordination-is widely explored in virtual video games but overlooked in real-world multi-robot contexts. Yet, such adaptive collaboration is crucial for real-world applications, including border surveillance, search-and-rescue, and counter-terrorism operations. To address this gap, we introduce AT-Drone, the first dedicated benchmark explicitly designed to facilitate comprehensive training and evaluation of adaptive teaming strategies in multi-drone pursuit scenarios. AT-Drone makes the following key contributions: (1) An adaptable simulation environment configurator that enables intuitive and rapid setup of adaptive teaming multi-drone pursuit tasks, including four predefined pursuit environments. (2) A streamlined real-world deployment pipeline that seamlessly translates simulation insights into practical drone evaluations using edge devices and Crazyflie drones. (3) A novel algorithm zoo integrated with a distributed training framework, featuring diverse algorithms explicitly tailored, for the first time, to multi-pursuer and multi-evader settings. (4) Standardized evaluation protocols with newly designed unseen drone zoos, explicitly designed to rigorously assess the performance of adaptive teaming. Comprehensive experimental evaluations across four progressively challenging multi-drone pursuit scenarios confirm AT-Drone's effectiveness in advancing adaptive teaming research. Real-world drone experiments further validate its practical feasibility and utility for realistic robotic operations. Videos, code and weights are available at \url{https://sites.google.com/view/at-drone}.