CAGE: Causal Attention Enables Data-Efficient Generalizable Robotic Manipulation

October 19, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation

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Authors Shangning Xia, Hongjie Fang, Cewu Lu, Hao-Shu Fang arXiv ID 2410.14974 Category cs.RO: Robotics Citations 12 Venue IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Generalization in robotic manipulation remains a critical challenge, particularly when scaling to new environments with limited demonstrations. This paper introduces CAGE, a novel robotic manipulation policy designed to overcome these generalization barriers by integrating a causal attention mechanism. CAGE utilizes the powerful feature extraction capabilities of the vision foundation model DINOv2, combined with LoRA fine-tuning for robust environment understanding. The policy further employs a causal Perceiver for effective token compression and a diffusion-based action prediction head with attention mechanisms to enhance task-specific fine-grained conditioning. With as few as 50 demonstrations from a single training environment, CAGE achieves robust generalization across diverse visual changes in objects, backgrounds, and viewpoints. Extensive experiments validate that CAGE significantly outperforms existing state-of-the-art RGB/RGB-D approaches in various manipulation tasks, especially under large distribution shifts. In similar environments, CAGE offers an average of 42% increase in task completion rate. While all baselines fail to execute the task in unseen environments, CAGE manages to obtain a 43% completion rate and a 51% success rate in average, making a huge step towards practical deployment of robots in real-world settings. Project website: cage-policy.github.io.
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