Events from January 20, 2017 – February 11, 2026 – Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
2026-02-11T00:00:00-05:00
  • PhD Thesis Proposal
    PhD Student
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Plan What You Can, Learn What You Must: Interleaving Planning and Learning for Multi-Robot Manipulation

    3305 Newell-Simon Hall

    Abstract: Multi-robot manipulation is becoming an inevitability of modern robotics. As hardware costs fall, the barrier to deploying robot teams has shifted from economics to algorithmic capability. To fulfill their promise, multi-robot systems must jointly reason about geometric coordination, contact interactions, task assignments, and scene dynamics, while adapting to variable team sizes and diverse robot [...]

    Faculty Events
    Associate Professor
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    To Be Announced

    Newell-Simon Hall 4305

    RI Seminar
    Jitendra Malik
    Arthur J. Chick Professor of EECS / VP and Distinguished Scientist
    University of California at Berkeley / Amazon

    Robot Learning, With Inspiration From Child Development

    1403 Tepper School Building

    Abstract: For intelligent robots to become ubiquitous, we need to “solve" locomotion, navigation and manipulation at sufficient reliability in widely varying environments. In locomotion, we now have demonstrations of humanoid walking in a variety of challenging environments.  In navigation, we pursued the task of “Go to Any Thing” – a robot, on entering  a newly [...]

    PhD Thesis Defense
    PhD Student
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    A Layered Foundation for Reliable Trajectory Forecasting: Data, Evaluation, and Methods

    GHC 4405

    Abstract: Reliable trajectory forecasting is a foundational requirement for autonomous robotic systems operating in environments with humans. Despite substantial progress in modeling techniques, existing forecasting systems often fail under distribution shift, exhibit socially implausible behaviors, or report misleading performance due to limitations in data coverage and evaluation practices. This thesis argues that reliable trajectory forecasting [...]

    PhD Thesis Proposal
    PhD Student
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Learning Dynamic and Competitive Human Skills and Strategies for Animation and Robotics

    Newell-Simon Hall 4305

    Abstract: Humanoid control in animation and robotics requires physically realistic motion as well as the ability to adapt, coordinate actions over time, and make decisions in response to changing environments and other agents. Human motion data provides a powerful source of prior knowledge for learning natural and stable movement, but many existing approaches rely on [...]

    PhD Thesis Defense
    PhD Student
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Advancing Spacecraft Autonomy: Optimal GNC, Vision-Based Estimation, and Systems Integration for Small Spacecraft

    Newell-Simon Hall 4305

    Abstract : Small spacecraft are increasingly expected to perform complex missions despite strict constraints in mass, power, and onboard computation. Meeting these demands requires advances in autonomy that enable effective decision-making, adaptive control, and robust state estimation within resource-limited platforms. This thesis develops optimization- and machine-learning–based methods to improve spacecraft autonomy across guidance, navigation, and [...]