Hybrid Imitative Planning with Geometric and Predictive Costs in Off-road Environments
Dashora, Nitish, Shin, Daniel, Shah, Dhruv, Leopold, Henry, Fan, David, Agha-Mohammadi, Ali, Rhinehart, Nicholas, Levine, Sergey
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Geometric methods for solving open-world off-road navigation tasks, by learning occupancy and metric maps, provide good generalization but can be brittle in outdoor environments that violate their assumptions (e.g., tall grass). Learning-based methods can directly learn collision-free behavior from raw observations, but are difficult to integrate with standard geometry-based pipelines. This creates an unfortunate conflict -- either use learning and lose out on well-understood geometric navigational components, or do not use it, in favor of extensively hand-tuned geometry-based cost maps. In this work, we reject this dichotomy by designing the learning and non-learning-based components in a way such that they can be effectively combined in a self-supervised manner. Both components contribute to a planning criterion: the learned component contributes predicted traversability as rewards, while the geometric component contributes obstacle cost information. We instantiate and comparatively evaluate our system in both in-distribution and out-of-distribution environments, showing that this approach inherits complementary gains from the learned and geometric components and significantly outperforms either of them. Videos of our results are hosted at https://sites.google.com/view/hybrid-imitative-planning
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-21-2021
- Country:
- Asia > Japan
- Honshū > Kansai > Hyogo Prefecture > Kobe (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.14)
- Asia > Japan
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.34)
- Industry:
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.50)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Machine Learning (1.00)
- Representation & Reasoning (0.93)
- Robots (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence