7,382 research outputs found
Probabilistic movement modeling for intention inference in human-robot interaction.
Intention inference can be an essential step toward efficient humanrobot interaction. For this purpose, we propose the Intention-Driven Dynamics Model (IDDM) to probabilistically model the generative process of movements that are directed by the intention. The IDDM allows to infer the intention from observed movements using Bayes ’ theorem. The IDDM simultaneously finds a latent state representation of noisy and highdimensional observations, and models the intention-driven dynamics in the latent states. As most robotics applications are subject to real-time constraints, we develop an efficient online algorithm that allows for real-time intention inference. Two human-robot interaction scenarios, i.e., target prediction for robot table tennis and action recognition for interactive humanoid robots, are used to evaluate the performance of our inference algorithm. In both intention inference tasks, the proposed algorithm achieves substantial improvements over support vector machines and Gaussian processes.
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Understanding Model-Based Reinforcement Learning and its Application in Safe Reinforcement Learning
Model-based reinforcement learning algorithms have been shown to achieve successful results on various continuous control benchmarks, but the understanding of model-based methods is limited. We try to interpret how model-based method works through novel experiments on state-of-the-art algorithms with an emphasis on the model learning part. We evaluate the role of the model learning in policy optimization and propose methods to learn a more accurate model. With a better understanding of model-based reinforcement learning, we then apply model-based methods to solve safe reinforcement learning (RL) problems with near-zero violation of hard constraints throughout training. Drawing an analogy with how humans and animals learn to perform safe actions, we break down the safe RL problem into three stages. First, we train agents in a constraint-free environment to learn a performant policy for reaching high rewards, and simultaneously learn a model of the dynamics. Second, we use model-based methods to plan safe actions and train a safeguarding policy from these actions through imitation. Finally, we propose a factored framework to train an overall policy that mixes the performant policy and the safeguarding policy. This three-step curriculum ensures near-zero violation of safety constraints at all times. As an advantage of model-based method, the sample complexity required at the second and third steps of the process is significantly lower than model-free methods and can enable online safe learning. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our methods in various continuous control problems and analyze the advantages over state-of-the-art approaches
Coordinated Multi-Agent Imitation Learning
We study the problem of imitation learning from demonstrations of multiple
coordinating agents. One key challenge in this setting is that learning a good
model of coordination can be difficult, since coordination is often implicit in
the demonstrations and must be inferred as a latent variable. We propose a
joint approach that simultaneously learns a latent coordination model along
with the individual policies. In particular, our method integrates unsupervised
structure learning with conventional imitation learning. We illustrate the
power of our approach on a difficult problem of learning multiple policies for
fine-grained behavior modeling in team sports, where different players occupy
different roles in the coordinated team strategy. We show that having a
coordination model to infer the roles of players yields substantially improved
imitation loss compared to conventional baselines.Comment: International Conference on Machine Learning 201
One-Shot Learning of Manipulation Skills with Online Dynamics Adaptation and Neural Network Priors
One of the key challenges in applying reinforcement learning to complex
robotic control tasks is the need to gather large amounts of experience in
order to find an effective policy for the task at hand. Model-based
reinforcement learning can achieve good sample efficiency, but requires the
ability to learn a model of the dynamics that is good enough to learn an
effective policy. In this work, we develop a model-based reinforcement learning
algorithm that combines prior knowledge from previous tasks with online
adaptation of the dynamics model. These two ingredients enable highly
sample-efficient learning even in regimes where estimating the true dynamics is
very difficult, since the online model adaptation allows the method to locally
compensate for unmodeled variation in the dynamics. We encode the prior
experience into a neural network dynamics model, adapt it online by
progressively refitting a local linear model of the dynamics, and use model
predictive control to plan under these dynamics. Our experimental results show
that this approach can be used to solve a variety of complex robotic
manipulation tasks in just a single attempt, using prior data from other
manipulation behaviors
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