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Artificial Intelligence for Robotics - Second Edition

You're reading from  Artificial Intelligence for Robotics - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805129592
Pages 344 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Francis X. Govers III Francis X. Govers III
Profile icon Francis X. Govers III

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Building Blocks for Robotics and Artificial Intelligence
2. Chapter 1: The Foundation of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up Your Robot 4. Chapter 3: Conceptualizing the Practical Robot Design Process 5. Part 2: Adding Perception, Learning, and Interaction to Robotics
6. Chapter 4: Recognizing Objects Using Neural Networks and Supervised Learning 7. Chapter 5: Picking Up and Putting Away Toys using Reinforcement Learning and Genetic Algorithms 8. Chapter 6: Teaching a Robot to Listen 9. Part 3: Advanced Concepts – Navigation, Manipulation, Emotions, and More
10. Chapter 7: Teaching the Robot to Navigate and Avoid Stairs 11. Chapter 8: Putting Things Away 12. Chapter 9: Giving the Robot an Artificial Personality 13. Chapter 10: Conclusions and Reflections 14. Answers 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Understanding our object recognition task

Having a computer or robot recognize an image of a toy is not as simple as taking two pictures and then saying if picture A = picture B, then toy. We are going to have to do quite a bit of work to be able to recognize a variety of objects that are randomly rotated, strewn about, and at various distances. We could write a program to recognize simple shapes – hexagons, for instance, or simple color blobs – but nothing as complex as a toy stuffed dog. Writing a program that did some sort of analysis of an image and computed the pixels, colors, distributions, and ranges of every possible permutation would be extremely difficult, and the result would be very fragile – it would fail at the slightest change in lighting or color.

Speaking from experience, I had a recent misadventure with a large robot that used a traditional computer vision system to find its battery charger station. That robot mistook an old, faded soft drink...

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