Kinematic Motion Retargeting via Neural Latent Optimization for Learning Sign Language
This addresses the challenge of reducing programming workload for robots in tasks like sign language, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing optimization and neural network approaches.
The paper tackles the problem of motion retargeting from human demonstrations to robots, particularly for sign language, by proposing a neural latent optimization method that improves efficiency and accuracy, achieving verified results in simulation and real-world environments with robots like YuMi, NAO, and Pepper.
Motion retargeting from a human demonstration to a robot is an effective way to reduce the professional requirements and workload of robot programming, but faces the challenges resulting from the differences between humans and robots. Traditional optimization-based methods are time-consuming and rely heavily on good initialization, while recent studies using feedforward neural networks suffer from poor generalization to unseen motions. Moreover, they neglect the topological information in human skeletons and robot structures. In this paper, we propose a novel neural latent optimization approach to address these problems. Latent optimization utilizes a decoder to establish a mapping between the latent space and the robot motion space. Afterward, the retargeting results that satisfy robot constraints can be obtained by searching for the optimal latent vector. Alongside with latent optimization, neural initialization exploits an encoder to provide a better initialization for faster and better convergence of optimization. Both the human skeleton and the robot structure are modeled as graphs to make better use of topological information. We perform experiments on retargeting Chinese sign language, which involves two arms and two hands, with additional requirements on the relative relationships among joints. Experiments include retargeting various human demonstrations to YuMi, NAO, and Pepper in the simulation environment and to YuMi in the real-world environment. Both efficiency and accuracy of the proposed method are verified.