Talk Through It: End User Directed Manipulation Learning

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Talk Through It: End User Directed Manipulation Learning

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2024

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Training robots to perform a huge range of tasks in many different environments is immensely difficult. Instead, we propose selectively training robots based on end-user preferences. Given a factory model that lets an end user instruct a robot to perform lower-level actions (e.g. ‘Move left’), we show that end users can collect demonstrations using language to train their home model for higher-level tasks specific to their needs (e.g. ‘Open the top drawer and put the block inside’). We demonstrate this hierarchical robot learning framework on robot manipulation tasks using a standard robot learning simulation environment: RLBench. Our method results in a 16% improvement in skill success rates compared to a baseline method. In further experiments, we explore the use of the large vision-language model (VLM), Bard, to automatically break down tasks into sequences of lower-level instructions, aiming to bypass end-user involvement. The VLM is unable to break tasks down to our lowest level, but does achieve good results breaking high-level tasks into mid-level skills. We have additional results at talk-through-it.github.io.

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University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. 2024. Major: Computer Science. Advisor: Karthik Desingh. 1 computer file (PDF); vi, 24 pages.

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Winge, Carl. (2024). Talk Through It: End User Directed Manipulation Learning. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/264275.

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