Vyacheslav Kovalev

2papers

2 Papers

ROJul 15, 2023
Combining model-predictive control and predictive reinforcement learning for stable quadrupedal robot locomotion

Vyacheslav Kovalev, Anna Shkromada, Henni Ouerdane et al.

Stable gait generation is a crucial problem for legged robot locomotion as this impacts other critical performance factors such as, e.g. mobility over an uneven terrain and power consumption. Gait generation stability results from the efficient control of the interaction between the legged robot's body and the environment where it moves. Here, we study how this can be achieved by a combination of model-predictive and predictive reinforcement learning controllers. Model-predictive control (MPC) is a well-established method that does not utilize any online learning (except for some adaptive variations) as it provides a convenient interface for state constraints management. Reinforcement learning (RL), in contrast, relies on adaptation based on pure experience. In its bare-bone variants, RL is not always suitable for robots due to their high complexity and expensive simulation/experimentation. In this work, we combine both control methods to address the quadrupedal robot stable gate generation problem. The hybrid approach that we develop and apply uses a cost roll-out algorithm with a tail cost in the form of a Q-function modeled by a neural network; this allows to alleviate the computational complexity, which grows exponentially with the prediction horizon in a purely MPC approach. We demonstrate that our RL gait controller achieves stable locomotion at short horizons, where a nominal MP controller fails. Further, our controller is capable of live operation, meaning that it does not require previous training. Our results suggest that the hybridization of MPC with RL, as presented here, is beneficial to achieve a good balance between online control capabilities and computational complexity.

20.6ROApr 16
Trajectory-based actuator identification via differentiable simulation

Vyacheslav Kovalev, Ekaterina Chaikovskaia, Egor Davydenko et al.

Accurate actuation models are critical for bridging the gap between simulation and real robot behavior, yet obtaining high-fidelity actuator dynamics typically requires dedicated test stands and torque sensing. We present a trajectory-based actuator identification method that uses differentiable simulation to fit system-level actuator models from encoder motion alone. Identification is posed as a trajectory-matching problem: given commanded joint positions and measured joint angles and velocities, we optimize actuator and simulator parameters by backpropagating through the simulator, without torque sensors, current/voltage measurements, or access to embedded motor-control internals. The framework supports multiple model classes, ranging from compact structured parameterizations to neural actuator mappings, within a unified optimization pipeline. On held-out real-robot trajectories for a high-gear-ratio actuator with an embedded PD controller, the proposed torque-sensor-free identification achieves much tighter trajectory alignment than a supervised stand-trained baseline dominated by steady-state data, reducing mean absolute position error from 14.20 mrad to as low as 7.54 mrad (1.88 times). Finally, we demonstrate downstream impact for the same actuator class in a real-robot locomotion study: training policies with the refined actuator model increases travel distance by 46% and reduces rotational deviation by 75% relative to the baseline.