A Graph Neural Network to Model Disruption in Human-Aware Robot Navigation
This work addresses the challenge of minimizing disruption to humans for assistive and service robots, though it is incremental as it builds on existing datasets and methods.
The paper tackles the problem of modeling disruption in human-aware robot navigation by using Graph Neural Networks to predict human movement and social conventions, achieving close-to-human performance on an updated dataset.
Autonomous navigation is a key skill for assistive and service robots. To be successful, robots have to minimise the disruption caused to humans while moving. This implies predicting how people will move and complying with social conventions. Avoiding disrupting personal spaces, people's paths and interactions are examples of these social conventions. This paper leverages Graph Neural Networks to model robot disruption considering the movement of the humans and the robot so that the model built can be used by path planning algorithms. Along with the model, this paper presents an evolution of the dataset SocNav1 [25] which considers the movement of the robot and the humans, and an updated scenario-to-graph transformation which is tested using different Graph Neural Network blocks. The model trained achieves close-to-human performance in the dataset. In addition to its accuracy, the main advantage of the approach is its scalability in terms of the number of social factors that can be considered in comparison with handcrafted models. The dataset and the model are available in a public repository (https://github.com/gnns4hri/sngnnv2).