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Official Task Suite Implementation of ICML'23 Paper "VIMA: General Robot Manipulation with Multimodal Prompts"

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VIMA-Bench: Benchmark for Multimodal Robot Learning

ICML 2023

VIMA-Bench is a newly introduced task suite and benchmark for learning general robot manipulation with multimodal prompts. It features 17 representative tasks with multimodal prompt templates, which can be procedurally instantiated into thousands of individual instances by various combinations of textures and tabletop objects. It also establishes a 4-level protocol to evaluate progressively stronger generalization capabilities, from randomized object placement to novel tasks altogether. Finally, it provides a massive imitation dataset with 650K successful trajectories and multimodal prompts to learn general robot manipulation.

Installation

VIMA-Bench requires Python ≥ 3.9. We have tested on Ubuntu 20.04 and Mac OS X. Installing VIMA-Bench is as simple as:

git clone https://github.com/vimalabs/VimaBench && cd VimaBench
pip install -e .

Getting Started

VIMA-Bench provides a Gym-style interface for developing robot agents conditioned on multimodal prompts that interact with the simulator in a loop. Here is a very simple code snippet to instantiate the task "Visual Manipulation" and query the corresponding prompt:

from vima_bench import make

env = make(task_name="visual_manipulation")

obs = env.reset()
prompt, prompt_assets = env.prompt, env.prompt_assets

Task Suite

VIMA-Bench features 17 representative tasks with multimodal prompt templates, which can be procedurally instantiated into thousands of individual instances by various combinations of textures and tabletop objects.

Task Name How to Create Demonstration
Simple Object Manipulation: Visual Manipulation make("visual_manipulation", ...)
Simple Object Manipulation: Scene Understanding make("scene_understanding", ...)
Simple Object Manipulation: Rotate make("rotate", ...)
Visual Goal Reaching: Rearrange make("rearrange", ...)
Visual Goal Reaching: Rearrange then Restore make("rearrange_then_restore", ...)
Novel Concept Grounding: Novel Adjective make("novel_adj", ...)
Novel Concept Grounding: Novel Noun make("novel_noun", ...)
Novel Concept Grounding: Novel Adjective and Noun make("novel_adj_and_noun", ...)
Novel Concept Grounding: Twist make("twist", ...)
One-shot Video Imitation: Follow Motion make("follow_motion", ...)
One-shot Video Imitation: Follow Order make("follow_order", ...)
Visual Constraint Satisfaction: Without Exceeding make("sweep_without_exceeding", ...)
Visual Constraint Satisfaction: Without Touching make("sweep_without_touching", ...)
Visual Reasoning: Same Texture make("same_texture", ...)
Visual Reasoning: Same Shape make("same_shape", ...)
Visual Reasoning: Manipulate Old Neighbor make("manipulate_old_neighbor", ...)
Visual Reasoning: Pick in Order then Restore make("pick_in_order_then_restore", ...)

Evaluation Benchmark

VIMA-Bench establishes a 4-level protocol to evaluate progressively stronger generalization capabilities, from randomized object placement to novel tasks altogether. Concretely, we partition the entire task suite into 4 groups:

from vima_bench import ALL_PARTITIONS
print(ALL_PARTITIONS)

>>> ['placement_generalization', 'combinatorial_generalization', 'novel_object_generalization', 'novel_task_generalization']

To instantiate a task with configs from a certain evaluation level (partition), run

from vima_bench import make, PARTITION_TO_SPECS

env = make(task, task_kwargs=PARTITION_TO_SPECS["test"][partition][task])

Note that different evaluation level (partition) has different tasks. See our paper for detailed information.

Create Benchmarking Environments

To create benchmarking environment instances used in our paper, let's say we want to evaluate on task task_name under the level partition with seed seed, we can simply run

env = make(
    task_name,
    modalities=["rgb", "segm"],
    task_kwargs=PARTITION_TO_SPECS["test"][partition][task_name] or {},
    seed=seed
)

Note that by default we set hide_arm_rgb = True to avoid any occlusions caused by the robot arm.

Observation and Action Space

By default, VIMA-Bench's observation space includes RGB images, segmentation, and an indicator specifying the type of end effector (suction cup or spatula). RGB and segmentation are spatially aligned and are from two views (frontal and top).

env.observation_space

>>> {
    "rgb": {
        "front": Box(0, 255, shape=(3, h, w), dtype=np.uint8),
        "top": Box(0, 255, shape=(3, h, w), dtype=np.uint8),
    },
    
    "segm": {
        "front": Box(0, 255, shape=(h, w), dtype=np.uint8),
        "top": Box(0, 255, shape=(h, w), dtype=np.uint8),        
    },
    
    "ee": Discrete(2),
}

VIMA-Bench's action space includes pick pose and place pose. Each pose consists of a 2D coordinate and a rotation represented as quaternion.

import numpy as np

env.action_space

>>> {
    "pose0_position": Box(low=[0.25, -0.5], high=[0.75, 0.50], shape=(2,), dtype=np.float32),
    "pose0_rotation": Box(low=-1, high=1, shape=(4,), dtype=np.float32),
    "pose1_position": Box(low=[0.25, -0.5], high=[0.75, 0.50], shape=(2,), dtype=np.float32),
    "pose1_rotation": Box(low=-1, high=1, shape=(4,), dtype=np.float32),
}

Oracle

We provide built-in oracles that can solve all tasks by accessing privileged state information.

To visualize oracle demonstrations, run

python3 scripts/oracle/run.py task={task_to_run}

These oracles can also be used to generate expert data for behavior learning. To generate data, run

python3 scripts/data_generation/run.py num_episodes_per_task={num_trajs_to_generate_per_task} save_path={save_path}

Training Data

We also release an offline dataset with 650K trajectories conditioned on multimodal prompts to learn general robot manipulation. Our dataset is hosted on 🤗Hugging Face.

After download and unzip, data are grouped into different tasks. Within each trajectory's folder, there are two folders rgb_front and rgb_top, and three files obs.pkl, action.pkl, and trajectory.pkl. RGB frames from a certain perspective are separately stored in corresponding folder. obs.pkl includes segmentation and state of end effector. action.pkl contains oracle actions. trajectory.pkl contains meta information such as elapsed steps, task information, and object information. Users can build their custom data piepline starting from here.

To run an example script to load a single trajectory:

python3 scripts/data_loading.py --path={path_to_a_single_trajectory}

Check out our paper!

Our paper is posted on arXiv. If you find our work useful, please consider citing us!

@inproceedings{jiang2023vima,
  title     = {VIMA: General Robot Manipulation with Multimodal Prompts},
  author    = {Yunfan Jiang and Agrim Gupta and Zichen Zhang and Guanzhi Wang and Yongqiang Dou and Yanjun Chen and Li Fei-Fei and Anima Anandkumar and Yuke Zhu and Linxi Fan},
  booktitle = {Fortieth International Conference on Machine Learning},
  year      = {2023}
}

License

Component License
Codebase (this repo) MIT License
Dataset Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

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Official Task Suite Implementation of ICML'23 Paper "VIMA: General Robot Manipulation with Multimodal Prompts"

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