Abstract

In this paper, we propose RiemannianFlow, a deep generative model that allows robots to learn complex and stable skills evolving on the Riemannian manifold. Examples of Riemannian data in robotics include stiffness (symmetric and positive definite matrix (SPD)) and orientation (unit quaternion (UQ)) trajectories. For Riemannian data, unlike Euclidean ones, different dimensions are interconnected by geometric constraints which have to be properly considered during the learning process. Using distance preserving mappings, our approach transfers the data between their original manifold and the tangent space, realizing the removing and re-fulfilling of the constraints. This allows to extend existing frameworks to learn stable skills from Riemannian data while guaranteeing the stability of the learning results. The ability of RiemannianFlow to learn various data patterns and the stability of the learned models are experimentally shown on a dataset of manifold motions. Further, we analyze from different perspectives the robustness of the model with different hyperparameter combinations. While stability is not affected by different hyperparameters, a proper choice of the hyperparameters leads to a significant improvement (up to 27.6%) in the model accuracy. Last, we show the effectiveness of RiemannianFlow in a real peg-in-hole (PiH) task where we need to generate stable and consistent position and orientation trajectories for the robot starting from different initial poses.

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