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A framework of safe robot planning

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Title: A framework of safe robot planning


1
A framework of safe robot planning
  • Roland Pihlakas
  • Institute of Technology in University of Tartu
  • august 2008

2
What is safe
  • Safe action or state is
  • a goal which is explicitly given to the robot
  • explicitly permitted change in the robots
    environment.
  • Everything else is unknown and possibly unsafe.
    Therefore should not be caused.
  • Some automatically calculated sub-goals can be
    unsafe too, unless permitted.

3
The problem
  • Why not to enumerate bad states
  • too much work
  • humans are poor at systematically predicting
    things. Especially when they are not directly
    interested in that
  • Why not to tell the robot all the sub-goals /
    steps towards the goal
  • too much work
  • again, unexpected consequences of given steps

4
The problem
  • Opposed interests
  • to let the human get the job of robot
    configuration / instruction done quickly
  • to still have control and no surprises

5
Proposed solution
  • Bad is implicit
  • Usually enumerate only
  • goals
  • okay changes gt permissions
  • Perhaps simpler to enumerate
  • Analogy public vs private law

6
A second analogy
  • Three laws in the order of priority
  • Do not do anything that is not explicitly
    permitted.
  • Fulfill the goals that are given to you.
  • Optionally fulfill the optional goals.

7
An useful concept
  • If you can undo something, it is usually safe,
    assuming that current state is safe.
  • From that follows
  • the principle of avoiding irreversible actions
  • two special classes for actions and their
    corresponding results, called irreversible
    actions and reversible actions.

8
Few motivating examples
  • Street cleaning
  • Room cleaning
  • Making room on harddisk
  • Littering crap

9
About permissions
  • The permissions are usually for
  • changes in given dimensions
  • usually not about specific actions

10
A simple language example
  • Goal x 2
  • Allow y any
  • Reverse z
  • Dontdisturb w
  • Guarantee for q1 44 is q2 37
  • Context a 177
  • Askauth allow b any

11
Data flow
Sensors, certain functions calculating some
value etc
The configuration
Three datastructures - preconditions / context -
keep-always conditions - goal conditions
Causal relations / prediction module
Automatic plan generation
Precondition checking
12
Adding optional goals to the language
  • An exampleObligatory Goal robot.location
    in front of TVOptional Goal
    floor.still_clean yes

13
Second extension cost calculation
  • Lets add budget for achieving optional goals
  • Optional Goal x4 3 Cost x4 10 Scale
    x4 //infinite resolution Dontdisturb x3
    Cost x3 4 Scale x3 per unitBudget
    55Max steps 20Max time 10min

14
The protocol
  • When giving permissions, make sure that context
    is correctly specified!
  • Opposing interests of human user
  • to give many permissions and get quickly rid of
    the job
  • giving only necessary permissions and to specify
    their proper context
  • Selinux analogy

15
Robot learning
  • The sandbox
  • Levels of sandboxes
  • Bonus understanding the concept of
    reversibilities helps to repeat motor actions
    until the coordination is good enough

16
Passive safety
  • Distinguishes users commands from auto-generated
    ones does not override users
  • The robot distinguishes clearly between the
    orders that were given and the sub-goals it has
    set to itself.
  • By default avoids only own mistakes.
  • Even more the robot may refuse to act. But will
    not do anything else than what humans have
    permitted.

17
Planning module
  • Uses minimax search
  • In case of uncertainties assumes worst
  • Optimises the cost of the plan

18
Errata
  • May stop when encountering unexpected / unknown
    situations, unless instructed otherwise using
    context-specific goals.

19
Implementation language
  • Prolog
  • has built-in parser (for configuration
    processing)
  • has variable data type
  • automatic memory management
  • has useful data types for expressing constraints,
    or uncertainty
  • conveniently short syntax for failing function
    calls and resuming alternatives at upper levels
    in the planning module
  • scriptable

20
Future
  • Multiple contexts / goal sets
  • Online planning, partial plans
  • Online diagnostics and remedy taking in case of
    danger, faults etc.
  • Automatically finding unnecessary rights
  • More powerful prediction module
  • Time constraints

21
Future
  • Asking for authorisation during planning
  • Askauth allow x any
  • Asking the user to choose and authorise one plan
    from a set of automatically proposed alternatives
  • Different userlevels
  • Understanding changes caused by external agents
    or natural forces

22
Immediate future
  • Prediction module using high-dimensional
    regression
  • Planning module planning / search to be done
    backwards from the goal, not by breath-first or
    depth-first search.
  • This also allows breaking the planning task to
    independent parts
  • Perception module hierarchical composition of
    entities in the sensory space-time and assigning
    some of them to keywords.
  • Bonus the same structure can possibly also be
    used for plan-generation / constraint
    satisfaction

23
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