Qin, Meiying and Brawer, Jake and Scassellati, Brian (2021) Rapidly Learning Generalizable and Robot-Agnostic Tool-Use Skills for a Wide Range of Tasks. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 8. ISSN 2296-9144
pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/frobt-08-726463/frobt-08-726463.pdf - Published Version
Download (4MB)
Abstract
Many real-world applications require robots to use tools. However, robots lack the skills necessary to learn and perform many essential tool-use tasks. To this end, we present the TRansferrIng Skilled Tool Use Acquired Rapidly (TRI-STAR) framework for task-general robot tool use. TRI-STAR has three primary components: 1) the ability to learn and apply tool-use skills to a wide variety of tasks from a minimal number of training demonstrations, 2) the ability to generalize learned skills to other tools and manipulated objects, and 3) the ability to transfer learned skills to other robots. These capabilities are enabled by TRI-STAR’s task-oriented approach, which identifies and leverages structural task knowledge through the use of our goal-based task taxonomy. We demonstrate this framework with seven tasks that impose distinct requirements on the usages of the tools, six of which were each performed on three physical robots with varying kinematic configurations. Our results demonstrate that TRI-STAR can learn effective tool-use skills from only 20 training demonstrations. In addition, our framework generalizes tool-use skills to morphologically distinct objects and transfers them to new platforms, with minor performance degradation.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Subjects: | Archive Science > Mathematical Science |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 23 Jun 2023 07:02 |
Last Modified: | 26 Jul 2024 07:19 |
URI: | http://editor.pacificarchive.com/id/eprint/1262 |