Learning Sim-to-Real Dense Object Descriptors for Robotic Manipulation
This addresses the sim-to-real gap in robotics manipulation, allowing for more efficient training using simulated data, though it is incremental as it builds on existing descriptor methods.
The paper tackles the problem of enabling robots to manipulate objects by learning dense object descriptors that transfer from simulation to reality, achieving zero real-world training and improving performance on unseen objects and environments.
It is crucial to address the following issues for ubiquitous robotics manipulation applications: (a) vision-based manipulation tasks require the robot to visually learn and understand the object with rich information like dense object descriptors; and (b) sim-to-real transfer in robotics aims to close the gap between simulated and real data. In this paper, we present Sim-to-Real Dense Object Nets (SRDONs), a dense object descriptor that not only understands the object via appropriate representation but also maps simulated and real data to a unified feature space with pixel consistency. We proposed an object-to-object matching method for image pairs from different scenes and different domains. This method helps reduce the effort of training data from real-world by taking advantage of public datasets, such as GraspNet. With sim-to-real object representation consistency, our SRDONs can serve as a building block for a variety of sim-to-real manipulation tasks. We demonstrate in experiments that pre-trained SRDONs significantly improve performances on unseen objects and unseen visual environments for various robotic tasks with zero real-world training.