Carnegie Mellon University
work, we address the problem of goal-directed cloth manipulation, a challenging task due to the deformability of cloth. Our insight is that optical flow, a technique normally used for motion estimation in video, can also provide an effective representation for corresponding cloth poses across observation and goal images. We introduce FabricFlowNet (FFN), a cloth manipulation policy that leverages flow as both an input and as an action representation to improve performance for folding tasks. FabricFlowNet also allows elegantly switching between dual-arm and single-arm actions based on the desired goal.
We show that FabricFlowNet outperforms state-of-the-art model-free and model-based cloth manipulation policies. We also present real-world experiments on a bimanual system, demonstrating effective sim-to-real transfer. In addition, we show that our method generalizes when trained on a single square cloth to other cloth shapes, such as t-shirts and rectangular cloth.
Committee:
David Held (advisor)
Oliver Kroemer
Arpit Agarwal
Zoom Link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/4525933133
Meeting ID: 452 593 3133