Home /Research /Learning Agile Swimming: An End-to-End Approach Without CPGs
LEARNING

Learning Agile Swimming: An End-to-End Approach Without CPGs

Xiaopei Liu, Yang Wang

Year
2025
Citations
6

Abstract

The pursuit of agile and efficient underwater robots, especially bio-mimetic robotic fish, has been impeded by challenges in creating motion controllers that are able to fully exploit their hydrodynamic capabilities. This paper addresses these challenges by introducing a novel, model-free, end-to-end control framework that leverages Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) to enable agile and energy-efficient swimming of robotic fish. Unlike existing methods that rely on predefined trigonometric swimming patterns like Central Pattern Generators (CPG), our approach directly outputs low-level actuator commands without strong constraints, enabling the robotic fish to learn agile swimming behaviors. In addition, by integrating a high-performance Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulator with innovative sim-to-real strategies, such as normalized density calibration and servo response calibration, the proposed framework significantly mitigates the sim-to-real gap, facilitating direct transfer of control policies to real-world environments without fine-tuning. Comparative experiments demonstrate that our method achieves faster swimming speeds, smaller turn-around radii, and reduced energy consumption compared to the state-of-the-art swimming controllers. Furthermore, the proposed framework shows promise in addressing complex tasks, paving the way for more effective deployment of robotic fish in real aquatic environments.

Keywords

Agile software developmentComputer scienceSoftware deploymentActuatorRobotServomotorControl engineeringEnergy consumptionExploitEnd-to-end principle

Related papers

Browse all LEARNING papers