2019 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS) 2019
DOI: 10.1109/iros40897.2019.8968120
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Enabling Human-Like Task Identification From Natural Conversation

Abstract: A robot as a coworker or a cohabitant is becoming mainstream day-by-day with the development of low-cost sophisticated hardware. However, an accompanying software stack that can aid the usability of the robotic hardware remains the bottleneck of the process, especially if the robot is not dedicated to a single job. Programming a multipurpose robot requires an on the fly mission scheduling capability that involves task identification and plan generation. The problem dimension increases if the robot accepts task… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Executing natural language instruction given to a robot is a well-studied problem, particularly for object fetching and navigational instruction. However, the existing works in the literature mostly focus on instruction understanding for plan generation [3,4] and assume that a generated plan can be executed without failure or further human intervention. Natural language instructions are prone to ambiguity and incompleteness that are often tackled using dialogue [5] and knowledge-based reasoning [6].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Executing natural language instruction given to a robot is a well-studied problem, particularly for object fetching and navigational instruction. However, the existing works in the literature mostly focus on instruction understanding for plan generation [3,4] and assume that a generated plan can be executed without failure or further human intervention. Natural language instructions are prone to ambiguity and incompleteness that are often tackled using dialogue [5] and knowledge-based reasoning [6].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, these systems only focus on the linguistic information provided by the human and do not take the uncertainty of the robot's perception into account when attempting to execute a plan. For example, in our earlier works, we have handled the natural language task instruction parsing to generate a high-level execution plan for the robot [3,7]. These systems are supported by a dialogue engine that can raise a suitable query for the human user if the robot could not understand the task [8].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Problem description. Existing works that translate natural language instruction to a sequence of actions, either constrain the instruction to a single task [5], [6] or assume multiple tasks are performed sequentially [7], [8], [9]. In the later case, the sequence is assumed to be the order in which the tasks appear in the instruction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%