MultiModal Action Conditioned Video Generation
Yichen Li, Antonio Torralba
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Current video models fail as world model as they lack fine-graiend control. General-purpose household robots require real-time fine motor control to handle delicate tasks and urgent situations. In this work, we introduce fine-grained multimodal actions to capture such precise control. We consider senses of proprioception, kinesthesia, force haptics, and muscle activation. Such multimodal senses naturally enables fine-grained interactions that are difficult to simulate with text-conditioned generative models. To effectively simulate fine-grained multisensory actions, we develop a feature learning paradigm that aligns these modalities while preserving the unique information each modality provides. We further propose a regularization scheme to enhance causality of the action trajectory features in representing intricate interaction dynamics. Experiments show that incorporating multimodal senses improves simulation accuracy and reduces temporal drift. Extensive ablation studies and downstream applications demonstrate the effectiveness and practicality of our work.
Keywords
Related papers
Review and perspectives on multimodal perception, mutual cognition, and embodied execution for human–robot collaboration in Industry 5.0
Kai Ding, Qingyuan Mao, Yaqian Zhang +3 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Agentic HRC: Achieving context alignment via memory for Human–Robot Collaboration
Jiahui Si, Wenchao Li, Xi Chen +4 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Towards human-centric manufacturing: Task planning under uncertainties in human–robot collaborative assembly
Yingchao You, Ze Ji, Changyun Wei
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Adaptive Physics-informed Transformer with Gaussian process residual compensation for inverse dynamics modeling in Human–Robot Collaboration
Rui Qian, Xi Zhang, Dongpeng Li +2 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026