UTCS Artificial Intelligence
courses
talks/events
demos
people
projects
publications
software/data
labs
admin
Optimizing Interdependent Skills for Simulated 3D Humanoid Robot Soccer (2010)
Daniel Urieli
and
Patrick MacAlpine
and
Shivaram Kalyanakrishnan
and
Yinon Bentor
and
Peter Stone
In several realistic domains an agent's behavior is composed of multiple interdependent skills. For example, consider a humanoid robot that must play soccer, as is the focus of this paper. In order to succeed, it is clear that the robot needs to walk quickly, turn sharply, and kick the ball far. However, these individual skills are ineffective if the robot falls down when switching from walking to turning, or if it cannot position itself behind the ball for a kick. This paper presents a learning architecture for a humanoid robot soccer agent that has been fully deployed and tested within the RoboCup 3D simulation environment. First, we demonstrate that individual skills such as walking and turning can be parameterized and optimized to match the best performance statistics reported in the literature. These results are achieved through effective use of the CMA-ES optimization algorithm. Next, we describe a framework for optimizing skills in conjunction with one another, a little-understood problem with substantial practical significance. Over several phases of learning, a total of roughly 100--150 parameters are optimized. Detailed experiments show that an agent thus optimized performs comparably with the top teams from the RoboCup 2010 competitions, while taking relatively few man-hours for development.
View:
PDF
,
PS
,
HTML
Citation:
In
The Fifth Workshop on Humanoid Soccer Robots at Humanoids 2010
, Nashville, TN, 2010.
Bibtex:
@InProceedings{HUMANOIDS10-urieli, title={Optimizing Interdependent Skills for Simulated 3D Humanoid Robot Soccer}, author={Daniel Urieli and Patrick MacAlpine and Shivaram Kalyanakrishnan and Yinon Bentor and Peter Stone}, booktitle={The Fifth Workshop on Humanoid Soccer Robots at Humanoids 2010}, address={Nashville, TN}, url="http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/ai-lab/pub-view.php?PubID=127049", year={2010} }
People
Yinon Bentor
Ph.D. Student
yinon@cs.utexas.edu
Shivaram Kalyanakrishnan
Alumni
shivaram@cs.utexas.edu
Patrick MacAlpine
Ph.D. Student
patmac@cs.utexas.edu
Peter Stone
Professor
pstone@cs.utexas.edu
Daniel Urieli
Ph.D. Student
urieli@cs.utexas.edu
Areas of Interest
Robotics
Robot Soccer
Humanoid Robots
RoboCup
Labs
Learning Agents