Learning Concept-Based Causal Transition and Symbolic Reasoning for Visual Planning
This work addresses the problem of enabling AI agents to perform daily tasks in complex environments through visual planning, representing an incremental advance with novel components for abstraction and reasoning.
The paper tackles visual planning by proposing an interpretable framework that abstracts visual inputs into concepts and performs symbolic reasoning to achieve goal states, demonstrating superior performance on a new dataset and generalization to unseen tasks and real-world data.
Visual planning simulates how humans make decisions to achieve desired goals in the form of searching for visual causal transitions between an initial visual state and a final visual goal state. It has become increasingly important in egocentric vision with its advantages in guiding agents to perform daily tasks in complex environments. In this paper, we propose an interpretable and generalizable visual planning framework consisting of i) a novel Substitution-based Concept Learner (SCL) that abstracts visual inputs into disentangled concept representations, ii) symbol abstraction and reasoning that performs task planning via the self-learned symbols, and iii) a Visual Causal Transition model (ViCT) that grounds visual causal transitions to semantically similar real-world actions. Given an initial state, we perform goal-conditioned visual planning with a symbolic reasoning method fueled by the learned representations and causal transitions to reach the goal state. To verify the effectiveness of the proposed model, we collect a large-scale visual planning dataset based on AI2-THOR, dubbed as CCTP. Extensive experiments on this challenging dataset demonstrate the superior performance of our method in visual task planning. Empirically, we show that our framework can generalize to unseen task trajectories, unseen object categories, and real-world data. Further details of this work are provided at https://fqyqc.github.io/ConTranPlan/.