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Intention-Aligned Imitation Learning (IAIL) enables robots to adapt demonstrated skills by aligning high-level intentions, not just copying movements. This allows robots to generalize tasks across different embodiments and environments.

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Area of Science:

  • Robotics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Machine Learning

Background:

  • Imitation learning (IL) enables robots to learn tasks from demonstrations.
  • Conventional IL struggles with adaptability due to strict requirements for identical conditions and robot embodiments.
  • Generalization across diverse robots and environments remains a significant challenge in current IL.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce the Intention-Aligned Imitation Learning (IAIL) framework for enhanced robot behavior adaptation.
  • To enable robots to reproduce motions from heterogeneous peers across unseen situations.
  • To facilitate scalable task allocation in heterogeneous robot teams.

Main Methods:

  • Developed IAIL, a novel behavior adaptation approach inspired by human cultural learning.
  • Constructed a shared intention space connecting robot motions with natural language annotations.
  • Enabled inference-time behavior adaptation across diverse embodiments and environmental contexts.

Main Results:

  • Validated IAIL through real-world experiments with seven distinct robots in multistep collaboration tasks.
  • Demonstrated robust intention-aligned behavior adaptation across variations in embodiment, motion modality, and task configuration.
  • Showcased flexible behavior transfer and resilient multirobot systems for reliable collaboration.

Conclusions:

  • IAIL significantly extends the scope of imitation learning beyond direct skill mapping.
  • The framework supports adaptable and generalizable robot behaviors in heterogeneous teams.
  • IAIL contributes to the development of resilient, autonomous multirobot systems for real-world applications.