This paper introduces Diffusion Policy, a new way of generating robot behavior by representing a robot's visuomotor policy as a conditional denoising diffusion process. We benchmark Diffusion Policy across 11 different tasks from 4 different robot manipulation benchmarks and find that it consistently outperforms existing state-of-the-art robot learning methods with an average improvement of 46.9%. Diffusion Policy learns the gradient of the action-distribution score function and iteratively optimizes with respect to this gradient field during inference via a series of stochastic Langevin dynamics steps. We find that the diffusion formulation yields powerful advantages when used for robot policies, including gracefully handling multimodal action distributions, being suitable for high-dimensional action spaces, and exhibiting impressive training stability. To fully unlock the potential of diffusion models for visuomotor policy learning on physical robots, this paper presents a set of key technical contributions including the incorporation of receding horizon control, visual conditioning, and the time-series diffusion transformer. We hope this work will help motivate a new generation of policy learning techniques that are able to leverage the powerful generative modeling capabilities of diffusion models. Code, data, and training details will be publicly available.
Diffusion Policy: Visuomotor Policy Learning via Action Diffusion
Diffusion Policy, a conditional denoising diffusion process, outperforms state-of-the-art robot learning methods by generating versatile and stable robot behaviors across various tasks.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 7
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2303.04137ARXIV-DEFAULT
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