ROJun 30, 2023
Decentralized Motor Skill Learning for Complex Robotic SystemsYanjiang Guo, Zheyuan Jiang, Yen-Jen Wang et al.
Reinforcement learning (RL) has achieved remarkable success in complex robotic systems (eg. quadruped locomotion). In previous works, the RL-based controller was typically implemented as a single neural network with concatenated observation input. However, the corresponding learned policy is highly task-specific. Since all motors are controlled in a centralized way, out-of-distribution local observations can impact global motors through the single coupled neural network policy. In contrast, animals and humans can control their limbs separately. Inspired by this biological phenomenon, we propose a Decentralized motor skill (DEMOS) learning algorithm to automatically discover motor groups that can be decoupled from each other while preserving essential connections and then learn a decentralized motor control policy. Our method improves the robustness and generalization of the policy without sacrificing performance. Experiments on quadruped and humanoid robots demonstrate that the learned policy is robust against local motor malfunctions and can be transferred to new tasks.
ROApr 21, 2023
Learning Robust, Agile, Natural Legged Locomotion Skills in the WildYikai Wang, Zheyuan Jiang, Jianyu Chen
Recently, reinforcement learning has become a promising and polular solution for robot legged locomotion. Compared to model-based control, reinforcement learning based controllers can achieve better robustness against uncertainties of environments through sim-to-real learning. However, the corresponding learned gaits are in general overly conservative and unatural. In this paper, we propose a new framework for learning robust, agile and natural legged locomotion skills over challenging terrain. We incorporate an adversarial training branch based on real animal locomotion data upon a teacher-student training pipeline for robust sim-to-real transfer. Empirical results on both simulation and real world of a quadruped robot demonstrate that our proposed algorithm enables robustly traversing challenging terrains such as stairs, rocky ground and slippery floor with only proprioceptive perception. Meanwhile, the gaits are more agile, natural, and energy efficient compared to the baselines. Both qualitative and quantitative results are presented in this paper.