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MSR Thesis Defense

May

1
Tue
Luona Yang Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University
Tuesday, May 1
11:30 am to 12:30 pm
NSH 1505
Real-to-Virtual Domain Unification for End-to-End Autonomous Driving

Abstract:

In the spectrum of vision-based autonomous driving, vanilla end-to-end models are not interpretable and suboptimal in performance, while mediated perception models require additional intermediate representations such as segmentation masks or detection bounding boxes, whose annotation can be prohibitively expensive as we move to a larger scale. More critically, all prior works fail to deal with the notorious domain shift if we were to merge data collected from different sources, which greatly hinders the model generalization ability. In this work, we address the above limitations by taking advantage of virtual data collected from driving simulators, and present DU-drive, an unsupervised real-to-virtual domain unification framework for end-to-end autonomous driving. It first transforms real driving data to its less complex counterpart in the virtual domain, then predicts vehicle control commands from the generated virtual image. Our framework maps driving data collected from a variety of source distributions into a unified domain, thus effectively eliminating domain shift. We also show that the learned virtual representation is simpler than the input real image and closer in form to the “minimum sufficient statistic” for the prediction task, which relieves the burden of the compression phase while optimizing the information bottleneck tradeoff and leads to superior prediction performance.