Handling crowdsourced data using state space discretization for robot learning and synthesizing physical skills
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2020
Abstract
Intelligent physical skills are a fundamental element needed by robots to interact with the real world. Instead of learning from individual sources in single cases, continuous robot learning from crowdsourced mentors over long terms provides a practical path towards realizing ubiquitous robot physical intelligence. The mentors can be human drivers that teleoperate robots when their intelligence is not yet enough for acting autonomously. A large amount of sensorimotor data can be obtained constantly from a group of teleoperators, and processed by machine learning to continuously generate and improve the autonomous physical skills of robots. This paper presents a learning method that utilizes state space discretization to sustainably manage constantly collected data and synthesize autonomous robot skills. Two types of state space discretization have been proposed. Their advantages and limits are examined and compared. Simulation and physical tests of two object manipulation challenges are conducted to examine the proposed learning method. The capability of handling system uncertainty, sustainably managing high-dimensional state spaces, as well as synthesizing new skills or ones that have only been partly demonstrated are validated. The work is expected to provide a long-term and big-scale measure to produce advanced robot physical intelligence.
Identifier
85096002011 (Scopus)
Publication Title
International Journal of Intelligent Robotics and Applications
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41315-020-00152-1
e-ISSN
2366598X
ISSN
23665971
First Page
390
Last Page
402
Issue
4
Volume
4
Grant
1944069
Fund Ref
National Science Foundation
Recommended Citation
Zhao, Leidi; Lu, Lu; and Wang, Cong, "Handling crowdsourced data using state space discretization for robot learning and synthesizing physical skills" (2020). Faculty Publications. 4764.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/4764
