OpenDR: An Open Toolkit for Enabling High Performance, Low Footprint Deep Learning for Robotics
March 01, 2022 Β· Declared Dead Β· π IEEE/RJS International Conference on Intelligent RObots and Systems
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Authors
N. Passalis, S. Pedrazzi, R. Babuska, W. Burgard, D. Dias, F. Ferro, M. Gabbouj, O. Green, A. Iosifidis, E. Kayacan, J. Kober, O. Michel, N. Nikolaidis, P. Nousi, R. Pieters, M. Tzelepi, A. Valada, A. Tefas
arXiv ID
2203.00403
Category
cs.RO: Robotics
Cross-listed
cs.AI
Citations
24
Venue
IEEE/RJS International Conference on Intelligent RObots and Systems
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Existing Deep Learning (DL) frameworks typically do not provide ready-to-use solutions for robotics, where very specific learning, reasoning, and embodiment problems exist. Their relatively steep learning curve and the different methodologies employed by DL compared to traditional approaches, along with the high complexity of DL models, which often leads to the need of employing specialized hardware accelerators, further increase the effort and cost needed to employ DL models in robotics. Also, most of the existing DL methods follow a static inference paradigm, as inherited by the traditional computer vision pipelines, ignoring active perception, which can be employed to actively interact with the environment in order to increase perception accuracy. In this paper, we present the Open Deep Learning Toolkit for Robotics (OpenDR). OpenDR aims at developing an open, non-proprietary, efficient, and modular toolkit that can be easily used by robotics companies and research institutions to efficiently develop and deploy AI and cognition technologies to robotics applications, providing a solid step towards addressing the aforementioned challenges. We also detail the design choices, along with an abstract interface that was created to overcome these challenges. This interface can describe various robotic tasks, spanning beyond traditional DL cognition and inference, as known by existing frameworks, incorporating openness, homogeneity and robotics-oriented perception e.g., through active perception, as its core design principles.
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