Researchers demonstrated their technique, a type of reinforcement learning, by having a robot complete various tasks - putting a clothes hanger on a rack, assembling a toy plane, screwing a cap on a water bottle, and more - without pre-programmed details about its surroundings.
"What we're reporting on here is a new approach to empowering a robot to learn," said Professor Pieter Abbeel of University of California, Berkeley's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences.
The researchers turned to a new branch of artificial intelligence known as deep learning, which is loosely inspired by the neural circuitry of the human brain when it perceives and interacts with the world.
In the experiments, the researchers worked with a Willow Garage Personal Robot 2 (PR2), which they nicknamed BRETT, or Berkeley Robot for the Elimination of Tedious Tasks.
The algorithm controlling BRETT's learning included a reward function that provided a score based upon how well the robot was doing with the task.
BRETT takes in the scene, including the position of its own arms and hands, as viewed by the camera. The algorithm provides real-time feedback via the score based upon the robot's movements.
Movements that bring the robot closer to completing the task will score higher than those that do not. The score feeds back through the neural net, so the robot can learn which movements are better for the task at hand.
With this approach, when given the relevant coordinates for the beginning and end of the task, the PR2 could master a typical assignment in about 10 minutes.
When the robot is not given the location for the objects in the scene and needs to learn vision and control together, the learning process takes about three hours.
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