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"What, not how": Solving an under-actuated insertion task from scratch (2010.15492v2)

Published 29 Oct 2020 in cs.RO

Abstract: Robot manipulation requires a complex set of skills that need to be carefully combined and coordinated to solve a task. Yet, most ReinforcementLearning (RL) approaches in robotics study tasks which actually consist only of a single manipulation skill, such as grasping an object or inserting a pre-grasped object. As a result the skill ('how' to solve the task) but not the actual goal of a complete manipulation ('what' to solve) is specified. In contrast, we study a complex manipulation goal that requires an agent to learn and combine diverse manipulation skills. We propose a challenging, highly under-actuated peg-in-hole task with a free, rotational asymmetrical peg, requiring a broad range of manipulation skills. While correct peg (re-)orientation is a requirement for successful insertion, there is no reward associated with it. Hence an agent needs to understand this pre-condition and learn the skill to fulfil it. The final insertion reward is sparse, allowing freedom in the solution and leading to complex emerging behaviour not envisioned during the task design. We tackle the problem in a multi-task RL framework using Scheduled Auxiliary Control (SAC-X) combined with Regularized Hierarchical Policy Optimization (RHPO) which successfully solves the task in simulation and from scratch on a single robot where data is severely limited.

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Authors (10)
  1. Giulia Vezzani (12 papers)
  2. Michael Neunert (29 papers)
  3. Markus Wulfmeier (46 papers)
  4. Rae Jeong (9 papers)
  5. Thomas Lampe (25 papers)
  6. Noah Siegel (10 papers)
  7. Roland Hafner (23 papers)
  8. Abbas Abdolmaleki (38 papers)
  9. Martin Riedmiller (64 papers)
  10. Francesco Nori (51 papers)
Citations (1)

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