This work proposes a general formulation for the Object Sorting problem, suitable to describe any non-deterministic environment characterized by friendly and adversarial interference. Such an approach, coupled with a Deep Reinforcement Learning algorithm, allows training policies to solve different sorting tasks without adjusting the architecture or modifying the learning method. Briefly, the environment is subdivided into a clutter, where objects are freely located, and a set of clusters, where objects should be placed according to predefined ordering and classification rules. A 3D grid discretizes such environment: the properties of an object within a cell depict its state. Such attributes include object category and order. A Markov Decision Process formulates the problem: at each time step, the state of the cells fully defines the environment's one. Users can custom-define object classes, ordering priorities, and failure rules. The latter by assigning a non-uniform risk probability to each cell. Performed experiments successfully trained and validated a Deep Reinforcement Learning model to solve several sorting tasks while minimizing the number of moves and failure probability. Obtained results demonstrate the capability of the system to handle non-deterministic events, like failures, and unpredictable external disturbances, like human user interventions.

Robotic Object Sorting via Deep Reinforcement Learning: a generalized approach

Nicola Giorgio;
2020

Abstract

This work proposes a general formulation for the Object Sorting problem, suitable to describe any non-deterministic environment characterized by friendly and adversarial interference. Such an approach, coupled with a Deep Reinforcement Learning algorithm, allows training policies to solve different sorting tasks without adjusting the architecture or modifying the learning method. Briefly, the environment is subdivided into a clutter, where objects are freely located, and a set of clusters, where objects should be placed according to predefined ordering and classification rules. A 3D grid discretizes such environment: the properties of an object within a cell depict its state. Such attributes include object category and order. A Markov Decision Process formulates the problem: at each time step, the state of the cells fully defines the environment's one. Users can custom-define object classes, ordering priorities, and failure rules. The latter by assigning a non-uniform risk probability to each cell. Performed experiments successfully trained and validated a Deep Reinforcement Learning model to solve several sorting tasks while minimizing the number of moves and failure probability. Obtained results demonstrate the capability of the system to handle non-deterministic events, like failures, and unpredictable external disturbances, like human user interventions.
2020
Reinforement Learning
Task Planning
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/443350
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