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Dynamic Domain Architectures for Model-based Autonomy

Dynamic Domain Architectures for Model-based Autonomy. Bob Laddaga Howard Shrobe Brian C. Williams (PI) MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab Space Systems Lab. Structure of the MIT Project. Two Major Design Foci Autonomous Vehicles Building on Brian Williams’ Work at NASA Ames

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Dynamic Domain Architectures for Model-based Autonomy

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  1. Dynamic Domain Architecturesfor Model-based Autonomy Bob Laddaga Howard Shrobe Brian C. Williams (PI) MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab Space Systems Lab

  2. Structure of the MIT Project • Two Major Design Foci • Autonomous Vehicles • Building on Brian Williams’ Work at NASA Ames • 1st Generation Software flown on Deep Space 1 • Extending the modeling framework to support hybrid systems • New mode-identification and mode-control algorithms • Perceptually Enabled Spaces • Building on the MIT AI Lab’s Intelligent Room • Emphasis on self-adaptivity, recovery from faults and attacks • Use of Machine Vision, Speech and NLP • New Emphasis on modeling, frameworks • Common Themes • Self-diagnosis, recovery, “domain architecture frameworks” • Integration through model-driven online inference • Multiplicity of methods for common abstract tasks • Extension to the MOBIES OEP’s.

  3. Model-based Programs Software Component Control templates Models of physical constituents Online Propositional Deduction TMS generate successor conflict database Model-based Integration of System Interactions Through Online Deduction Goals Model • monitoring • tracking goals • confirming commands • isolating faults • diagnosing faults • reconfiguring hardware • coordinating control policies • recovering from faults • avoiding failures Controller s’(t) mode identification mode control (t) s(t) g f Plant • allocate resources • select execution times • select procedures • order actions Model-based Deductive Executive

  4. 15 25 25 20 15 Model Based TroubleshootingGDE Times 3 Plus 40 40 5 Times 5 5 Plus 40 35 Times 3 Conflicts: Blue or Violet Broken Diagnoses: Green Broken, Red with compensating fault Green Broken, Yellow with masking fault

  5. Applying Failure Models Observed: 5 Predicted: Low = 5 High = 10 B L H P Normal: 2 4 0.9 Fast: -30 1 .04 Slow: 5 30 .06 A OUT1 MID Low = 3 High = 6 L H P Normal: 3 6 .7 Fast: -30 2 .1 Slow: 7 30 .2 0 IN L H P Normal: 5 10 0.8 Fast: -30 4 .03 Slow: 11 30 .07 OUT2 Observed: 17 Predicted: Low = 8 High =16 C Consistent Diagnoses ABC MID MID Prob Explanation Low High NormalNormalSlow 3 3 .04410 C is delayed SlowFastNormal 7 12 .00640 A Slow, B Masks runs negative! FastNormalSlow 1 2 .00630 A Fast, C Slower Normal FastSlow 4 6 .00196 B not too fast, C slow FastSlowSlow -30 0 .00042 A Fast, B Masks, C slow SlowFastFast 13 30 .00024 A Slow, B Masks, C not masking fast

  6. Modeling Reactive Fallible Systems • Create a new modeling reactive programming language to describe the behavior of the combined hardware-software system • Underlying semantics is that of a (partially observable) Markov Model • Mode Identification (diagnosis) is now the problem of state estimation in a HMM

  7. Conditional probability = .2 Normal: Delay: 2,4 Delayed: Delay 4,+inf Accelerated: Delay -inf,2 Normal: Probability 90% Parasite: Probability 9% Other: Probability 1% Conditional probability = .4 Conditional probability = .3 Has models Has models Node17 Component 1 Located On Moving to a Multi-Tiered Bayesian Framework • The model has two levels of detail specifying computations, the underlying resources and the mapping of computations to resources • Each resource has models of its state of compromise • The modes of the resource models are linked to the modes of the computational models by conditional probabilities • The Model can be viewed as a Bayesian Network

  8. Summary of Autonomous Vehicle Work • To survive decades, autonomous systems must orchestrate complex regulatory and immune systems. • Future systems will be programmed with models, describing themselves and their environments. • Future runtime kernels will be agile, deducing and planning from these models within the reactive loop. • This requires a new foundation for embedded computation, replacing discrete automata with partially observable Markov decision processes. • We propose to extend model-based programming to dynamic domain specific languages with distributed model-based executives that reason over complex, functionally redundant behaviors.

  9. Software Frameworks for Embedded Systems A framework reifies a model in code, API, and in the constraints and guarantees the model provides. It includes: • A set of properties & formal ontology of the domain of concern • An axiomatization of the core domain theory • Analytic (e.g. proof) techniques tailored to these properties and their domain theory • A run-time infrastructure providing a rich set of layered services • Models describing the goal-directed structure of these software services • A protocol specifying the rules by which other software interacts with the infrastructure provided by the framework • An domain-specific extension language for coupling an application to the services rendered by the framework.

  10. Frameworks Support Analysis • The model is specified in terms of a domain specific extension language that captures the terms and concepts used by application domain experts. • The ontology provides a language in which to state annotations of the program (e.g. goals, alternative strategies and methods for achieving goals, sub-goal structure, state-variables, declarations, assertions, and requirements). • Annotations inform program analysis. • Both logical and probabilistic. • Annotations facilitate the writing of high level generators • Synthesizing the wrapper code that integrates multiple frameworks.

  11. Dynamic Domain Architecture Frameworks • Structures the procedural knowledge of the domain into layers of services • Services at one layer invoke services from lower layers to achieve their sub-goals. • Each service has many implementations corresponding to the variability and parameterization of the domain. • The choice of implementation to invoke is made at runtime, in light of runtime conditions, with the goal of maximizing expected utility. • Exposes its models, goal structure, state-variables, its API, its protocol of use and constraints on those subsystems that interact with it.

  12. Component Asset Base Foo Foo B 1 2 3 A A B 1 2 3 C 1 2 3 Self Monitoring B A Condition-1 Condition-1 DDA Framework Diagnosis & Recovery Rational Selection Diagnostic Service To: Execute Foo Method 3 Is most Attractive 1 2 3 Repair Plan Selector Super routines alerts Layer1 Layer2 Rollback Designer Layer3 Synthesized Sentinels Plan Structures Resource Allocator Post Condition 1 of Foo Because Post Cond 2 of B And Post Cond 1 of C PreReq 1 of B Because Post Cond 1 of A Enactment Development Environment Runtime Environment

  13. Integration of DDA Frameworks • Frameworks interact at runtime by observing and reasoning about one another's state and by posting goals and constraints to guide each other's behaviors. • The posting and observation of state is facilitated by wrapper code inserted into each framework by model-based generators of the interacting frameworks. • Use of generated observation, control points and novel, fast propositional reasoning techniques allow this to happen within reactive time frames. • The composite system behaves as if it is goal directed while avoiding the overhead normally associated with generalized reasoning.

  14. Perceptually Enabled Spaces • The Intelligent Room is an Integrated Environment for Multi-modal HCI. It has Eyes and Ears.. • The room provides speech input • The room has deep understanding of natural language utterances • The room has a variety of machine vision systems that enable it to: • Track motion and maintain the position of people • Recognize gestures • Recognize body postures • Identify faces (eventually) • Track pointing devices (e.g. laser pointer) • Select Optimal Camera for Remote Viewers • Steer Cameras to track focus of attention • Perceptually enabled environments are good surrogates for sensor driven DoD applications (e.g. missile defense).

  15. Command Post Demo (2 years old)

  16. MetaGlue:A Platform for Perceptually Enabled Environments • Naming and Discovery • Society, Role within Society, Required Properties • Societies are collection that act on behalf of a common entity (person or space) • Central Registry • Discovery • Environmental Specific info • Storage of Agent State • Communication • Direct Method Call (using RMI) • Robustness • Freezing of State and Thawing on Automatic restart of dead-agents • Dynamic Reloading of Agents during system execution • Dynamic Collaboration Between Agents • Publish and Subscribe driven event interfaces

  17. Agents Currently Provided in MetaGlue • Control of Devices • X10 and similar simple sensors and effectors • Audio visual equipment and multiplexers • Display and Screen Management • Speech recognition components • Contextual grammars and command processing • Visual processing • Laser pointer tracking • Face tracking for video conferencing • Natural language processing • Interfaces to the start system

  18. Grammar Agents Grammar Agents Grammar Agents Grammar Agents Event Cluster Space Event Cluster Space Event Cluster Space Event Cluster Space Mux Room Mux Room Mux Room Mux Room Mux Hal Mux Hal Mux Hal Mux Hal Above Couch Above Couch Above Couch Above Couch Lamp Door Lamp Door Lamp Door Lamp Door WWW Lamp Window Lamp Manager CD Player TV X10 Tuner AgentTester Notifier Demo Manager Doc Retrieval Map Display Laser-1 Drapes Logger Blinds On Table IR Display Manager Preference Learner Above Door RS-232 Cluster Learner Living Room Laser-2 Info Retrieval Eliza Room Tutor Drapes Blinds Command Post Drapes Room State WWW Command Post Lamp Manager Person Tracker Laser-1 CD Player TV Tuner Laser-2 X10 Logger Room Tutor Notifier Map Display AgentTester Demo Manager Doc Retrieval Cluster Learner START On Table Eliza RS-232 Lamp Window Max Prob Music Selector Audio Manager Display Manager START Preference Learner Above Door Audio Manager Living Room Info Retrieval Room State Eliza IR Music Selector Demo Manager Person Tracker Notifier Demo Manager Doc Retrieval Map Display Laser-2 X10 Person Tracker IR START Blinds Max Prob X10 IR RS-232 AgentTester Person Tracker Logger Tuner Audio Manager Display Manager Max Prob Above Door Music Selector On Table Cluster Learner Command Post Preference Learner Laser-1 RS-232 Lamp Manager CD Player TV Living Room Max Prob Room State Audio Manager Blinds Room Tutor WWW CD Player AgentTester Notifier Logger Cluster Learner Tuner Music Selector Lamp Manager Info Retrieval Lamp Window WWW Drapes TV START Display Manager Preference Learner Lamp Window On Table Command Post Living Room Info Retrieval Above Door Laser-2 Laser-1 Map Display Doc Retrieval Eliza Room Tutor Room State On TV On TV On TV On TV VCR VCR VCR VCR Vision Agents Vision Agents Vision Agents Vision Agents

  19. The Need for Frameworks • MetaGlue is a lightweight, distributed object infrastructure for perceptually enabled systems. Meta-Glue provides tools for integrating and dynamically connecting components, extensibility and for saving and restoring the state of components. • The current incarnation of the system deals with the key modeling challenges with ad croc techniques. • In MOBIES we are developing principled frameworks for these modeling challenges. • Each framework provides languages, interfaces and guarantees for a specific set of concerns. • These frameworks deal with semantics, context, resource management and robustness.

  20. 5 Key Modeling challenges • How to model people, processes and perceptions so as to enable group interactions in multiple spaces • How to model services so as to enable reasonably optimal use of resources • How to model processes so as to recover from failures (e.g. equipment breakdown, failed assumptions) • How to model perceptual events so as to coordinate and fuse information from many sensors • How to model and exploit context

  21. Grounding in Semantics • We want to build applications that simultaneously service multiple people, organizations, physical spaces, sensors and effectors. • The individuals move within and among many physical spaces • The roles and responsibilities of individuals changes over time. • The devices and resources they use change as time progresses • The context shifts during interactions • The relevant information base evolves over time.

  22. Models and Knowledge Representations • People • Interests, Skills, Responsibilities, Organizational Role • Organizations • Members, structure, roles, processes and procedures. • Spaces • Location, Subspaces • Devices and Resources contained in the space. • Services: Methods, parameter bindings, resource requirements • Agents: Capabilities, interfaces, society. • Resources: Interfaces, capabilities, cost, reliability • Information Nodes: Topic area, place in ontology, format • Events • Changes in any of the above representations or in the system’s knowledge about any of the above. • E.g. person identification, Motion in space.

  23. Abstracting Away from Specific Devices • Until recently, applications were written in terms of specific resources without context (e.g. the left projector). • This conflicts with: • Portability across physical contexts • Changes in equipment availability across time • Multiple applications demanding similar resources • Need to take advantage of new resources • Need to integrate mobile devices as they migrate into a space • Need to link two or more spaces • What is required is a more abstract approach, a framework for resource management, in which no application needs to be tied to a specific device.

  24. Framework 1:Service Mapping and Resource Management • Users request abstract services from the Service Mapper • “I want to get a textual message to a system wizard” • The Service Mapper has many plans for how to render each service • “Locate a wizard, project on a wall near her” • “Locate a wizard, use a voice synthesizer and a speaker near her” • “Print the message and page the Wizards to go to the printer” • Each plan requires certain resources (and other abstract services) • Some resources are more valuable, scarce, utilized than others • The Resource Manager places a “price” on each resource • Each plan provides the service with different qualities • Some of these are more desired by the user (higher benefit) • The Service Mapper picks a plan which is (nearly) optimal • Maximum net benefit

  25. Each Method Requires Different Resources Each Method Binds the Settings of The Control Parameters in a Different Way Resource1,1 Service Control Parameters Resource Cost Function Method1 Resource1,2 User’s Utility Function Abstract Service Method2 Resource1,j The binding of parameters has a value to the user Methodn User Requests A Service with certain parameters The Resources Used by the Method Have a cost Each Service can be Provided by Several Methods Net Benefit Service Mapping and Resource Management The System Selects the Method Which Maximizes Net Benefit

  26. Plan 1: Locate A Systems Wizard, Project on a wall near her Costs: Project (in use) high, person Location (high) Benefits: Fast, Clear Plan 2: Locate A Systems Wizard, Voice Synthesize on nearby speaker Costs: Load-Speaker (unused) mid, person location (high) Benefit: Fast, Catches attention I need to ask a question of a Systems Wizard Go to Printer Plan 3: Print on printer, Send a page on the Wizard Line Costs: Printer (busy) mid, pager (mid) Benefit: Mid A Service Mapping Example The best plan under the Circumstances is Plan 3!

  27. Framework 2: Recovery From Failures • The Service Mapping framework renders services by translating them into plans involving physical resources • Physical resources have known (and unknown) failure modes • Each plan step accomplishes sub-goal conditions needed by succeeding steps • Each condition has some way of monitoring whether it has been accomplished • These monitoring steps are generated into the code implementing the plan • If a sub-goal fails to be accomplished, the diagnostic infrastructure is invoked

  28. Diagnostic Service B alerts Repair Plan Selector A Condition-1 Rollback Designer Condition-1 requires prerequisite achieves Concrete Repair Plan Resource Allocator Monitor Resource Plan Enactment Making the System Responsible for Achieving Its Goals Localization & Characterization Scope of Recovery Selection of Alternative

  29. Diagnosis and Recovery Framework • Model-based diagnosis isolates and characterizes the failure • Driven by detected discrepancies between expectations and observations • Each component has models of both normal and abnormal modes of operation • Selects set of components models consistent with observations • A recovery is chosen based on the diagnosis • It might be as simple as “try it again”, we had a network glitch • It might be “try it again, but with a different selection of resources” • It might be as complex as “clean up and try a different plan”

  30. I don’t see light on the screen Locate a Wizard by the Screen Monitoring: check that wizard is still there Turn on selected projector Monitoring: Check that the projector is on Plan Breakdown The projector-1 must be broken We’ll try again, but use Projector-3 I see a wizard by the screen Example of Recovering from Failures Project the message Monitoring: Check that the person noticed the message

  31. Framework 3:Coordination of Perceptual Information • We wish to separate the implementation of perceptual tasks from the uses to which perception is put • Communication between modules focuses on “behavioral events” • An event is signaled whenever the state of any object in the model is perceived to change • E.g. a person moves, a person is identified, a device dies • Communication is controlled by publish-subscribe interface • Each module publishes in central registry which events it can notice • Each module subscribes with registry for events of interest • Registry distributes to signalers list of consumers • More exactly code to test list of consumers • No centralized communications hub

  32. I’m interested in the location of individuals I signal people approaching the whiteboard White Board Context Manager I’m interested in face location I signal the location of individuals Face Recognition I’m interested in body motion I signal the location of individuals I’m interested in body motion I signal face location Voice Identification Face Spotter I signal body motion Visual Tracker The Event “Bus” For Perceptual Coordination

  33. Coordination of Perceptual Information • “Behavioral events” are organized into a taxonomy • Some behaviors are “close to the physics” • Some behaviors are more abstract (e.g. a person is near the white-board) • Events are signaled with a certainty estimate • Behaviors abstract over time • Recognizers take the form of Markov chains • The same event can be signaled by different perceptual modules • both face and voice recognition can identify a person • Recognizer code is synthesized from logical descriptions

  34. It’s Sue Certainty:high Service Request: Get Good Pose Plan: Synthesize Good Pose Get another view Visual Hull Interpolate It’s Sally Certainty:very low Recovery: Get Good Pose There is a face Certainty:high Diagnosis: Bad Pose There is a body Certainty: high Interaction of Frameworks:Perceptual Integration through Service Request • For each behavior there is a corresponding Service • This can be requested through the Service Mapping framework • Requested when the initial perception lacks confidence • Driven by diagnosis of perceptual breakdown • Cause the system to marshal resources necessary to gather the additional information needed for disambiguation

  35. time = i time = i+1 Framework 4:Contextual management of perception • Context is a combination of: • Information from all perceptual modalities • Task Structure • Context biases perceptual processing • speech • vision (eventually) perception  context Task structure

  36. Using Context to Guide Speech Recognition • Based on IBM’s ViaVoice • Large assembly (~ 50) of software agents • Many small grammars • Each Appropriate to a Specific Context • Dynamically activate & deactivate based on the interaction • Simulate a very large set of supported utterances • Reject utterances inappropriate to the Context + + + +

  37. Activate the Drawing Grammar If Person ?P approaches space ?x and Grammar ?y is relevant to ?x Then Activate Grammar ?y Frobulate the sidetracker The Drawing Grammar Is Relevant to space Whiteboard-1 Sally approaches space Whiteboard-1 If A space ?x contains a drawing device ?y Then the Drawing Grammar is relevant to space ?x White Board Place Manager Space Whiteboard-1 contains device mimeo-1 Mimeo devices are drawing devices An Example of Context Management • The attention of the system should be focussed by what people do and say. • Speech recognition should be biased in favor of things going on at that time • Speech system is made up of many “grammar fragments” • Grammar fragments are activated (and deactivated) when perceptual events (visual or speech) suggest they should be

  38. Framework 5:Application Frameworks for Display and Cmd Mgt • An application manages: • A set of displays • A set of perceptual capabilities • An underlying set of state-variables (the root nodes of its representation) • Application loop: • Accept a service request (a command) • Perform the service • Update the displays to reflect new state-variables • Gives a sense of synchronicity at the high level even though at the lower level there are many distributed agents at work

  39. Elements of Application Framework Display Display Display Manager State Variables

  40. Summary • First focus is on model-driven integration of autonomous vehicles • New modeling, and mode-identification techniques being developed • Second focus is on perceptually guided environments • Several frameworks being developed to support specific issues • Service Mapping, Perceptual Coordination, Diagnosis and recovery, Contextual Biasing • Common theme of structuring into frameworks along the lines of Dynamic Domain Architectures. • Will soon investigate OEP domains as well.

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