Here is the schedule for final project presentations. As we discussed in class, the presentation will be 15 minutes followed by five minutes of questions. Although we discussed doing auto-advance in class,with the longer talks, I'd like to try without auto advance, because I think 15 minutes is too long for auto-advance to work well. Thus you can use whatever presentation tool and format that you'd like.
Your presentation should include:
- Research question
- Significance (why is it an important problem?)
- Related Work (who else has addressed it, and how is your approach different?)
- Methodology (what you did to address the problem)
- Results (what new things have you learned about the research question?)
- Contributions (What have you contributed to the state of the art through this project? What is the answer to your research question?)
Thursday 12/5:
- Jun Ki Lee, Zhiqiang Sui. Learning Natural Language Commands for Robots in Home Environment Situations.
- Miles Eldon and Kurt Spindler. Comparing Inference Algorithms for Grounding Trajectories.
- Do Kook Choe. Navigation via Machine Translation.
- Stephen Brawner. Task-based User Modeling in Shared Autonomy.
- David Abel and Gabrial Barth-Maron
- Lauren Bilsky. Machine Translation using Grounded Language and Topic Modeling.
- Andrew Kovacs and Sam Birch. Webtalk.
- Xiaolu Li , Zhe Zhao. Automatic Turtle Graphics.
- Izaak Baker and Nakul Gopalan. Athena.
- Charles Yeh and Bowei Wang. Application of SHRDLU in Minecraft.
- Yujie Wan, Lixing Lian. Learning Semantic Parser from Question-Answer Pairs.
- Tom Sgouros. SHRDLU updated: parsing with ambiguity and without rules