ROAILGNov 1, 2023

Learning to Design and Use Tools for Robotic Manipulation

Stanford
arXiv:2311.00754v119 citationsh-index: 77
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of robotic manipulation by introducing a method for dynamic tool design, which is incremental as it builds on prior joint optimization techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of enabling robots to design and use tools for manipulation tasks, demonstrating that their reinforcement learning framework improves sample efficiency in multi-goal settings and allows zero-shot adaptation to new tasks.

When limited by their own morphologies, humans and some species of animals have the remarkable ability to use objects from the environment toward accomplishing otherwise impossible tasks. Robots might similarly unlock a range of additional capabilities through tool use. Recent techniques for jointly optimizing morphology and control via deep learning are effective at designing locomotion agents. But while outputting a single morphology makes sense for locomotion, manipulation involves a variety of strategies depending on the task goals at hand. A manipulation agent must be capable of rapidly prototyping specialized tools for different goals. Therefore, we propose learning a designer policy, rather than a single design. A designer policy is conditioned on task information and outputs a tool design that helps solve the task. A design-conditioned controller policy can then perform manipulation using these tools. In this work, we take a step towards this goal by introducing a reinforcement learning framework for jointly learning these policies. Through simulated manipulation tasks, we show that this framework is more sample efficient than prior methods in multi-goal or multi-variant settings, can perform zero-shot interpolation or fine-tuning to tackle previously unseen goals, and allows tradeoffs between the complexity of design and control policies under practical constraints. Finally, we deploy our learned policies onto a real robot. Please see our supplementary video and website at https://robotic-tool-design.github.io/ for visualizations.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes