Incremental Learning of an Open-Ended Collaborative Skill Library

Intelligent assistive robots can potentially contribute to maintaining an elderly person’s independence by supporting everyday life activities. However, the number of different and personalized activities to be supported renders pre-programming of all respective robot behaviors prohibitively difficu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of HR : humanoid robotics Vol. 17; no. 1; p. 2050001
Main Authors Koert, Dorothea, Trick, Susanne, Ewerton, Marco, Lutter, Michael, Peters, Jan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Singapore World Scientific Publishing Company 01.02.2020
World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte., Ltd
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ISSN0219-8436
1793-6942
DOI10.1142/S0219843620500012

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Summary:Intelligent assistive robots can potentially contribute to maintaining an elderly person’s independence by supporting everyday life activities. However, the number of different and personalized activities to be supported renders pre-programming of all respective robot behaviors prohibitively difficult. Instead, to cope with a continuous and potentially open-ended stream of cooperative tasks, new collaborative robot behaviors need to be continuously learned and updated from demonstrations. To this end, we introduce an online learning method to incrementally build a cooperative skill library of probabilistic interaction primitives. The resulting model chooses a corresponding robot response to a human movement where the human intention is extracted from previously demonstrated movements. While existing batch learning methods for movement primitives usually learn such skill libraries only once for a pre-defined number of different skills, our approach enables extending the skill library in an open-ended and online fashion from new incoming demonstrations. The proposed approach is evaluated on a low-dimensional benchmark task and in a collaborative scenario with a 7DoF robot, where we also investigate the generalization of learned skills between different subjects.
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ISSN:0219-8436
1793-6942
DOI:10.1142/S0219843620500012