arXiv:2511.17581v3 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Modeling the cognitive and experiential factors of human navigation is central to deepening our understanding of human-environment interaction and to enabling safe social navigation and effective assistive wayfinding. Most existing methods focus on forecasting motions in fully observed scenes and often neglect human factors that capture how people feel and respond to space. To address this gap, we propose EgoCogNav, a multimodal egocentric navigation framework that jointly forecasts perceived path uncertainty, trajectories and head motion fro

Source: arXiv cs.LG — read the full report at the original publisher.

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