Full metadata
Title
AnyNMP: Generative Cross-Embodiment Neural Motion Planning
Description
Manipulator motion planning has conventionally been solved using sampling and optimization-based algorithms that are agnostic to embodiment and environment configurations. However, these algorithms plan on a fixed environment representation approximated using shape primitives, and hence struggle to find solutions for cluttered and dynamic environments. Furthermore, these algorithms fail to produce solutions for complex unstructured environments under real-time bounds. Neural Motion Planners (NMPs) are an appealing alternative to algorithmic approaches as they can leverage parallel computing for planning while incorporating arbitrary environmental constraints directly from raw sensor observations. Contemporary NMPs successfully transfer to different environment variations, however, fail to generalize across embodiments. This thesis proposes "AnyNMP'', a generalist motion planning policy for zero-shot transfer across different robotic manipulators and environments. The policy is conditioned on semantically segmented 3D pointcloud representation of the workspace thus enabling implicit sim2real transfer. In the proposed approach, templates are formulated for manipulator kinematics and ground truth motion plans are collected for over 3 million procedurally sampled robots in randomized environments. The planning pipeline consists of a state validation model for differentiable collision detection and a sampling based planner for motion generation. AnyNMP has been validated on 5 different commercially available manipulators and showcases successful cross-embodiment planning, achieving an 80% average success rate on baseline benchmarks.
Date Created
2024
Contributors
- Rath, Prabin Kumar (Author)
- Gopalan, Nakul (Thesis advisor)
- Yu, Hongbin (Thesis advisor)
- Yang, Yezhou (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
56 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.193564
Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
Note
Partial requirement for: M.S., Arizona State University, 2024
Field of study: Computer Science
System Created
- 2024-05-02 02:07:39
System Modified
- 2024-05-02 02:07:46
- 6 months 3 weeks ago
Additional Formats