Toward a Science of Autonomy for Physical Systems: Paths
Pieter Abbeel, Ken Goldberg, Gregory Hager, Julie Shah

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges of creating autonomous physical systems capable of complex, independent task execution across various domains, and outlines three promising research directions: Deep Reinforcement Learning, Human-Robot Interaction, and Cloud Robotics.
Contribution
It introduces three innovative research paths to enhance autonomy in physical systems, emphasizing learning and interaction methods beyond traditional programming.
Findings
Deep Reinforcement Learning enables adaptable decision-making.
Human-Robot Interaction improves system understanding and cooperation.
Cloud Robotics facilitates data sharing and learning across systems.
Abstract
An Autonomous Physical System (APS) will be expected to reliably and independently evaluate, execute, and achieve goals while respecting surrounding rules, laws, or conventions. In doing so, an APS must rely on a broad spectrum of dynamic, complex, and often imprecise information about its surroundings, the task it is to perform, and its own sensors and actuators. For example, cleaning in a home or commercial setting requires the ability to perceive, grasp, and manipulate many physical objects, the ability to reliably perform a variety of subtasks such as washing, folding, and stacking, and knowledge about local conventions such as how objects are classified and where they should be stored. The information required for reliable autonomous operation may come from external sources and from the robot's own sensor observations or in the form of direct instruction by a trainer. Similar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotics and Automated Systems · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Robot Manipulation and Learning
