Learning compositional dynamics models for model-based control
Author(s)
Li, Yunzhu(Scientist in electrical engineering and computer science)Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Other Contributors
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
Advisor
Antonio Torralba and Russ Tedrake.
Terms of use
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Show full item recordAbstract
Compared with off-the-shelf physics engines, a learnable simulator has a stronger ability to adapt to unseen objects, scenes, and tasks. However, existing models like Interaction Networks only work for fully observable systems; they also only consider pairwise interactions within a single time step, both restricting their use in practical systems. We introduce Propagation Networks (PropNets), a differentiable, learnable dynamics model that handles partially observable scenarios and enables instantaneous propagation of signals beyond pairwise interactions. In the second half of the thesis, I will discuss our attempt to extend PropNets to learn a particle-based simulator for handling matters of various substances--rigid or soft bodies, liquid, gas--each with distinct physical behaviors. Combining learning with particle-based systems brings in two major benefits: first, the learned simulator, just like other particle-based systems, acts widely on objects of different materials; second, the particle-based representation poses strong inductive bias for learning: particles of the same type have the same dynamics within. We demonstrate that our models not only outperform current learnable physics engines in forward simulation, but also achieve superior performance on various control tasks, such as manipulating a pile of boxes, a cup of water, and a deformable foam, with experiments both in simulation and in the real world. Compared with existing model-free deep reinforcement learning algorithms, model-based control with our models is also more accurate, efficient, and generalizable to new, partially observable scenes and tasks.
Description
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, May, 2020 Cataloged from the official PDF of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 55-58).
Date issued
2020Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer SciencePublisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Keywords
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.