AutoRT: Embodied Foundation Models for Large Scale Orchestration of Robotic Agents

Bibliographic Details
Title: AutoRT: Embodied Foundation Models for Large Scale Orchestration of Robotic Agents
Authors: Ahn, Michael, Dwibedi, Debidatta, Finn, Chelsea, Arenas, Montse Gonzalez, Gopalakrishnan, Keerthana, Hausman, Karol, Ichter, Brian, Irpan, Alex, Joshi, Nikhil, Julian, Ryan, Kirmani, Sean, Leal, Isabel, Lee, Edward, Levine, Sergey, Lu, Yao, Maddineni, Sharath, Rao, Kanishka, Sadigh, Dorsa, Sanketi, Pannag, Sermanet, Pierre, Vuong, Quan, Welker, Stefan, Xia, Fei, Xiao, Ted, Xu, Peng, Xu, Steve, Xu, Zhuo
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: Computer Science
Subject Terms: Computer Science - Robotics, Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Computer Science - Machine Learning
More Details: Foundation models that incorporate language, vision, and more recently actions have revolutionized the ability to harness internet scale data to reason about useful tasks. However, one of the key challenges of training embodied foundation models is the lack of data grounded in the physical world. In this paper, we propose AutoRT, a system that leverages existing foundation models to scale up the deployment of operational robots in completely unseen scenarios with minimal human supervision. AutoRT leverages vision-language models (VLMs) for scene understanding and grounding, and further uses large language models (LLMs) for proposing diverse and novel instructions to be performed by a fleet of robots. Guiding data collection by tapping into the knowledge of foundation models enables AutoRT to effectively reason about autonomy tradeoffs and safety while significantly scaling up data collection for robot learning. We demonstrate AutoRT proposing instructions to over 20 robots across multiple buildings and collecting 77k real robot episodes via both teleoperation and autonomous robot policies. We experimentally show that such "in-the-wild" data collected by AutoRT is significantly more diverse, and that AutoRT's use of LLMs allows for instruction following data collection robots that can align to human preferences.
Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, ICRA 2024 VLMNM Workshop
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2401.12963
Accession Number: edsarx.2401.12963
Database: arXiv
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