Learning to Singulate Objects using a Push Proposal Network
Learning to act in unstructured environments, such as cluttered piles of objects, poses a substantial challenge for manipulation robots. We present a novel neural network-based approach that separates unknown objects in clutter by selecting favourable push actions. Our network is trained from data c...
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Zusammenfassung: | Learning to act in unstructured environments, such as cluttered piles of
objects, poses a substantial challenge for manipulation robots. We present a
novel neural network-based approach that separates unknown objects in clutter
by selecting favourable push actions. Our network is trained from data
collected through autonomous interaction of a PR2 robot with randomly organized
tabletop scenes. The model is designed to propose meaningful push actions based
on over-segmented RGB-D images. We evaluate our approach by singulating up to 8
unknown objects in clutter. We demonstrate that our method enables the robot to
perform the task with a high success rate and a low number of required push
actions. Our results based on real-world experiments show that our network is
able to generalize to novel objects of various sizes and shapes, as well as to
arbitrary object configurations. Videos of our experiments can be viewed at
http://robotpush.cs.uni-freiburg.de |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1707.08101 |