Mastering Robot Manipulation with Multimodal Prompts through Pretraining and Multi-task Fine-tuning
This work addresses the challenge of multimodal understanding in robotics, which is incremental as it builds on existing prompt-based learning methods.
The paper tackles the problem of training robots to understand multimodal prompts combining vision and text for manipulation tasks, achieving a 10% improvement in success rate on VIMA-BENCH and demonstrating in-context learning ability.
Prompt-based learning has been demonstrated as a compelling paradigm contributing to large language models' tremendous success (LLMs). Inspired by their success in language tasks, existing research has leveraged LLMs in embodied instruction following and task planning. In this work, we tackle the problem of training a robot to understand multimodal prompts, interleaving vision signals with text descriptions. This type of task poses a major challenge to robots' capability to understand the interconnection and complementarity between vision and language signals. In this work, we introduce an effective framework that learns a policy to perform robot manipulation with multimodal prompts from multi-task expert trajectories. Our methods consist of a two-stage training pipeline that performs inverse dynamics pretraining and multi-task finetuning. To facilitate multimodal understanding, we design our multimodal prompt encoder by augmenting a pretrained LM with a residual connection to the visual input and model the dependencies among action dimensions. Empirically, we evaluate the efficacy of our method on the VIMA-BENCH and establish a new state-of-the-art (10% improvement in success rate). Moreover, we demonstrate that our model exhibits remarkable in-context learning ability. Project page: \url{https://midas-icml.github.io/}.