Towards Interpretable Foundation Models of Robot Behavior: A Task Specific Policy Generation Approach
Isaac Sheidlower, Reuben Aronson, Elaine Schaertl Short
- Year
- 2024
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Foundation models are a promising path toward general-purpose and user-friendly robots. The prevalent approach involves training a generalist policy that, like a reinforcement learning policy, uses observations to output actions. Although this approach has seen much success, several concerns arise when considering deployment and end-user interaction with these systems. In particular, the lack of modularity between tasks means that when model weights are updated (e.g., when a user provides feedback), the behavior in other, unrelated tasks may be affected. This can negatively impact the system's interpretability and usability. We present an alternative approach to the design of robot foundation models, Diffusion for Policy Parameters (DPP), which generates stand-alone, task-specific policies. Since these policies are detached from the foundation model, they are updated only when a user wants, either through feedback or personalization, allowing them to gain a high degree of familiarity with that policy. We demonstrate a proof-of-concept of DPP in simulation then discuss its limitations and the future of interpretable foundation models.
Keywords
Related papers
Parallel Differentiable Reachability for Learning and Planning with Certified Neural Dynamics and Controllers
Keyi Shen, Glen Chou
2026
A deep reinforcement learning and a dynamic graph neural network-based scheduling agent to control a multi-task robot
Hedi Boukamcha, Anas Neumann, Monia Rekik +3 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Artificial Intelligence enhanced smart welding islands: Foundation models revolutionizing manufacturing
Xiwei Wu, Wei Wu, Qiqi Chen +6 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
LLM Agent-driven Automated DFA Assessment with Fine-tuning and AAS-based RAG
Jiaxin Liu, Xiaofeng Zhou, Suyang Yu +5 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026