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Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Chen, Y; Zhu, P; Alers, A; Egner, T; Sommer, MA; Ferrari, S
Published in: Frontiers in robotics and AI
January 2024

Inferential decision-making algorithms typically assume that an underlying probabilistic model of decision alternatives and outcomes may be learned a priori or online. Furthermore, when applied to robots in real-world settings they often perform unsatisfactorily or fail to accomplish the necessary tasks because this assumption is violated and/or because they experience unanticipated external pressures and constraints. Cognitive studies presented in this and other papers show that humans cope with complex and unknown settings by modulating between near-optimal and satisficing solutions, including heuristics, by leveraging information value of available environmental cues that are possibly redundant. Using the benchmark inferential decision problem known as "treasure hunt", this paper develops a general approach for investigating and modeling active perception solutions under pressure. By simulating treasure hunt problems in virtual worlds, our approach learns generalizable strategies from high performers that, when applied to robots, allow them to modulate between optimal and heuristic solutions on the basis of external pressures and probabilistic models, if and when available. The result is a suite of active perception algorithms for camera-equipped robots that outperform treasure-hunt solutions obtained via cell decomposition, information roadmap, and information potential algorithms, in both high-fidelity numerical simulations and physical experiments. The effectiveness of the new active perception strategies is demonstrated under a broad range of unanticipated conditions that cause existing algorithms to fail to complete the search for treasures, such as unmodelled time constraints, resource constraints, and adverse weather (fog).

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Published In

Frontiers in robotics and AI

DOI

EISSN

2296-9144

ISSN

2296-9144

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

11

Start / End Page

1384609

Related Subject Headings

  • 46 Information and computing sciences
  • 40 Engineering
  • 0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • 0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing
 

Citation

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Chen, Y., Zhu, P., Alers, A., Egner, T., Sommer, M. A., & Ferrari, S. (2024). Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 11, 1384609. https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2024.1384609
Chen, Yucheng, Pingping Zhu, Anthony Alers, Tobias Egner, Marc A. Sommer, and Silvia Ferrari. “Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception.Frontiers in Robotics and AI 11 (January 2024): 1384609. https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2024.1384609.
Chen Y, Zhu P, Alers A, Egner T, Sommer MA, Ferrari S. Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception. Frontiers in robotics and AI. 2024 Jan;11:1384609.
Chen, Yucheng, et al. “Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception.Frontiers in Robotics and AI, vol. 11, Jan. 2024, p. 1384609. Epmc, doi:10.3389/frobt.2024.1384609.
Chen Y, Zhu P, Alers A, Egner T, Sommer MA, Ferrari S. Heuristic satisficing inferential decision making in human and robot active perception. Frontiers in robotics and AI. 2024 Jan;11:1384609.

Published In

Frontiers in robotics and AI

DOI

EISSN

2296-9144

ISSN

2296-9144

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

11

Start / End Page

1384609

Related Subject Headings

  • 46 Information and computing sciences
  • 40 Engineering
  • 0906 Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  • 0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing