19,183 research outputs found
Modelling and analyzing adaptive self-assembling strategies with Maude
Building adaptive systems with predictable emergent behavior is a challenging task and it is becoming a critical need. The research community has accepted the challenge by introducing approaches of various nature: from software architectures, to programming paradigms, to analysis techniques. We recently proposed a conceptual framework for adaptation centered around the role of control data. In this paper we show that it can be naturally realized in a reflective logical language like Maude by using the Reflective Russian Dolls model. Moreover, we exploit this model to specify, validate and analyse a prominent example of adaptive system: robot swarms equipped with self-assembly strategies. The analysis exploits the statistical model checker PVeStA
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
Learning Contact-Rich Manipulation Skills with Guided Policy Search
Autonomous learning of object manipulation skills can enable robots to
acquire rich behavioral repertoires that scale to the variety of objects found
in the real world. However, current motion skill learning methods typically
restrict the behavior to a compact, low-dimensional representation, limiting
its expressiveness and generality. In this paper, we extend a recently
developed policy search method \cite{la-lnnpg-14} and use it to learn a range
of dynamic manipulation behaviors with highly general policy representations,
without using known models or example demonstrations. Our approach learns a set
of trajectories for the desired motion skill by using iteratively refitted
time-varying linear models, and then unifies these trajectories into a single
control policy that can generalize to new situations. To enable this method to
run on a real robot, we introduce several improvements that reduce the sample
count and automate parameter selection. We show that our method can acquire
fast, fluent behaviors after only minutes of interaction time, and can learn
robust controllers for complex tasks, including putting together a toy
airplane, stacking tight-fitting lego blocks, placing wooden rings onto
tight-fitting pegs, inserting a shoe tree into a shoe, and screwing bottle caps
onto bottles
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