Analysing Autonomous Open-Ended Learning of Skills With Different Interdependent Subgoals in Robots

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Identifiers

Publication date

Authors

Baldassarre, Gianluca
Santucci, Vieri Giuliano

Advisors

Other responsabilities

Journal Title

Bibliographic citation

A. Romero, G. Baldassarre, R. J. Duro and V. G. Santucci, "Analysing autonomous open-ended learning of skills with different interdependent subgoals in robots," 2021 20th International Conference on Advanced Robotics (ICAR), Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2021, pp. 646-651, doi: 10.1109/ICAR53236.2021.9659371.

Type of academic work

Academic degree

Abstract

[Abstract] Open-ended learning is a relevant approach allowing the design of robots able to autonomously acquire goals and motor skills useful for solving users' problems. An important challenge in this field involves the autonomous learning of interdependent tasks, where learning one skill requires the achievement of environment states (goals) representing preconditions for the skill that is being learned. Here we enhance and compare two robotic architectures, based on previously proposed works, to study which features favour the learning of goals in the presence of different types of interdependencies. The architectures are tested with a Baxter robot solving a series of tasks, consisting in learning to turn on some button-lights while respecting increasingly complex relations between them. The results show that dealing with goal interdependencies at the high level of the architectures is advantageous with longer goal chains; instead, dealing with the interdependencies at the lower motor-skill level is advantageous when exploration can cause conditions precluding the accomplishment of desired goals.

Description

Keywords

Rights

© 2021 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.