ROSep 18, 2018

Proceedings of the AI-HRI Symposium at AAAI-FSS 2018

arXiv:1809.06606v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This is an incremental perspective piece for researchers in AI and robotics, emphasizing the importance of HRI without introducing new methods or data.

The paper argues that Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) is a critical domain for advancing AI and robotics, as it involves developing autonomous robots that learn from humans in uncertain environments, but it does not present specific results or numbers.

The goal of the Interactive Learning for Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) symposium is to bring together the large community of researchers working on interactive learning scenarios for interactive robotics. While current HRI research involves investigating ways for robots to effectively interact with people, HRI's overarching goal is to develop robots that are autonomous while intelligently modeling and learning from humans. These goals greatly overlap with some central goals of AI and interactive machine learning, such that HRI is an extremely challenging problem domain for interactive learning and will elicit fresh problem areas for robotics research. Present-day AI research still does not widely consider situations for interacting directly with humans and within human-populated environments, which present inherent uncertainty in dynamics, structure, and interaction. We believe that the HRI community already offers a rich set of principles and observations that can be used to structure new models of interaction. The human-aware AI initiative has primarily been approached through human-in-the-loop methods that use people's data and feedback to improve refinement and performance of the algorithms, learned functions, and personalization. We thus believe that HRI is an important component to furthering AI and robotics research.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes