=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-2325/paper-01 |storemode=property |title=None |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2325/paper-01.pdf |volume=Vol-2325 }} ==None== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2325/paper-01.pdf
   openEASE — an open knowledge service for knowledge
   representation and reasoning research for robotic agents

                                                     Michael Beetz
                                         Institute for Artificial Intelligence
                                                 University Bremen
                                       Am Fallturm 1,28359 Bremen, Germany




   Abstract

   In this talk I will present openEASE, a web-based knowledge service providing robot and human activity
data. openEASE contains semantically annotated data of manipulation actions, including the environment the
agent is acting in, the objects it manipulates, the task it performs, and the behavior it generates. The episode
representations can include images captured by the robot, other sensor datastreams as well as full-body poses. A
powerful query language and inference tools, allow reasoning about the data and retrieving requested information
based on semantic queries. Based on the data and using the inference tools robots can answer queries regarding
to what they did, why, how, what happened, and what they saw.
   openEASE can be used by KR&R researchers using a browser-based query and visualization interface, but
also remotely by robotic via a WebSocket API.




   About the Author

   Michael Beetz is a professor for Computer Science at the Faculty for Mathematics & Informatics of the
University Bremen and head of the Institute for Artificial Intelligence (IAI). He received his diploma degree in
Computer Science with distinction from the University of Kaiserslautern. His MSc, MPhil, and PhD degrees
were awarded by Yale University in 1993, 1994, and 1996, and his Venia Legendi from the University of Bonn in
2000. He was vice-coordinator of the German cluster of excellence CoTeSys (Cognition for Technical Systems,
2006-2011), coordinator of the European FP7 integrating project RoboHow (web-enabled and experience-based
cognitive robots that learn complex everyday manipulation tasks, 2012-2016), and is the coordinator of the
German collaborative research centre EASE (Everyday Activity Science and Engineering, since 2017). His
research interests include plan-based control of robotic agents, knowledge processing and representation for
robots, integrated robot learning, and cognition-enabled perception.




Copyright c by the paper’s authors. Copying permitted for private and academic purposes.
In: G. Steinbauer, A. Ferrein (eds.): Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Cognitive Robotics, Tempe, AZ, USA,
27-Oct-2018, published at http://ceur-ws.org




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