Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago (TTIC)
6045 S. Kenwood Ave., Chicago, IL 60637
cbschaff (at) ttic (dot) edu
I am on the job market looking for research or engineering positions related to Reinforcement Learning, Deep Learning, and Robotics.
I am a final-year PhD student at Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago (TTIC) studying Machine Learning and Robotics under the supervision of Matthew Walter. Before coming to TTIC, I recieved my B.S. in Computer Science from Washington University in St Louis in 2016.
We participated in the Real Robot Challenge which tasked participants with manipulating objects with the TriFinger Platform. We won 1st place in all competitive phases and recieved a 12,500 Euro cash prize.
[code] [paper] [videos]I led other members of the RIPL lab at the TTIC in the development of software to physically solve a Rubik's Cube with our Baxter robot. We showcased our system at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago for the 2019 National Robotics Week exhibit. Using only cameras mounted on Baxer our robot was able to find cubes on a table, pick them up, scan the cube to determine its state, and manipulate the cube until solved. We used clustering techniques to determine the colors on each face of the cube, Kociemba's two phase algorithm for solving the cube, and visual servoing to accurately turn cube faces.
[videos]With Prof. Matthew Walter and other students in the RIPL lab at the TTIC, I developed and showcased our UR5-equipped Husky A200 robot safely playing Checkers against human opponents at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago for the 2018 National Robotics Week exhibit. Using an Realsense RGBD camera, the robot determined the location of the pieces, the state of the game, and presense of of humans in its workspace. The robot played the game using a simple minimax agent and was able to set clear and set up the pieces.
The Duckietown project aims to educate and excite the world about the challenges of robotics and AI by building and experimenting with autonomous vehicles called "Duckiebots" in a miniature town. In the fall of 2017, I participated in a Duckietown course taught by Prof. Matthew Walter at TTIC. My project in that course centered around transferring models for autonomous driving trained in simulation to the real Duckietown. For more details and videos, check out the project page.
[project page]Last Updated: April, 2022