Action Image Representation: Learning Scalable Deep Grasping Policies with Zero Real World Data
This addresses the challenge of sim-to-real transfer for robotic grasping, enabling scalable policy learning without costly real-world data collection.
The paper tackles the problem of learning deep grasping policies without real-world training data by introducing Action Image, a grasp proposal representation that enables end-to-end policy learning. It achieves 84% grasp success on 172 real-world objects using only simulation training on 48 objects with naive domain randomization.
This paper introduces Action Image, a new grasp proposal representation that allows learning an end-to-end deep-grasping policy. Our model achieves $84\%$ grasp success on $172$ real world objects while being trained only in simulation on $48$ objects with just naive domain randomization. Similar to computer vision problems, such as object detection, Action Image builds on the idea that object features are invariant to translation in image space. Therefore, grasp quality is invariant when evaluating the object-gripper relationship; a successful grasp for an object depends on its local context, but is independent of the surrounding environment. Action Image represents a grasp proposal as an image and uses a deep convolutional network to infer grasp quality. We show that by using an Action Image representation, trained networks are able to extract local, salient features of grasping tasks that generalize across different objects and environments. We show that this representation works on a variety of inputs, including color images (RGB), depth images (D), and combined color-depth (RGB-D). Our experimental results demonstrate that networks utilizing an Action Image representation exhibit strong domain transfer between training on simulated data and inference on real-world sensor streams. Finally, our experiments show that a network trained with Action Image improves grasp success ($84\%$ vs. $53\%$) over a baseline model with the same structure, but using actions encoded as vectors.