Home /Research /Gibson Env: Real-World Perception for Embodied Agents
PERCEPTION

Gibson Env: Real-World Perception for Embodied Agents

Fei Xia, Amir Zamir, Zhiyang He, Alexander F. Sax, Jitendra Malik, Silvio Savarese

Year
2018
Citations
714

Abstract

Developing visual perception models for active agents and sensorimotor control in the physical world are cumbersome as existing algorithms are too slow to efficiently learn in real-time and robots are fragile and costly. This has given rise to learning-in-simulation which consequently casts a question on whether the results transfer to real-world. In this paper, we investigate developing real-world perception for active agents, propose Gibson Environment for this purpose, and showcase a set of perceptual tasks learned therein. Gibson is based upon virtualizing real spaces, rather than artificially designed ones, and currently includes over 1400 floor spaces from 572 full buildings. The main characteristics of Gibson are: I. being from the real-world and reflecting its semantic complexity, II. having an internal synthesis mechanism "Goggles" enabling deploying the trained models in real-world without needing domain adaptation, III. embodiment of agents and making them subject to constraints of physics and space.

Keywords

Embodied cognitionPerceptionComputer scienceAdaptation (eye)RobotSet (abstract data type)Human–computer interactionSpace (punctuation)Artificial intelligenceDomain (mathematical analysis)

Related papers

Browse all PERCEPTION papers