Generalization Through Hand-Eye Coordination: An Action Space for Learning Spatially-Invariant Visuomotor Control
Chen Wang, Rui Wang, Ajay Mandlekar, Li Fei-Fei, Silvio Savarese, Danfei Xu
Abstract
Imitation Learning (IL) is an effective framework to learn visuomotor skills from offline demonstration data. However, IL methods often fail to generalize to new scene configurations not covered by training data. On the other hand, humans can manipulate objects in varying conditions. Key to such capability is hand-eye coordination, a cognitive ability that enables humans to adaptively direct their movements at task-relevant objects and be invariant to the objects’ absolute spatial location. In this work, we present a learnable action space, Hand-eye Action Networks (HAN) that learns coordinated hand-eye movements from human teleoperated demonstrations. Through a set of challenging multi-stage manipulation tasks, we show that a visuomotor policy equipped with HAN is able to inherit the key spatial invariance property of handeye coordination and achieve generalization to new scene configurations. Additional materials available at https://sites.google.com/stanford.edu/han