Publication | Closed Access
A New Path: Scaling Vision-and-Language Navigation with Synthetic Instructions and Imitation Learning
27
Citations
43
References
2023
Year
Unknown Venue
Artificial IntelligenceLanguage GroundingEngineeringMachine LearningSequential LearningCognitive RoboticsSynthetic InstructionsScene ModelingLanguage ProcessingMultimodal LlmVisual GroundingRobot LearningRobotics PerceptionRl AgentsMachine TranslationSynthetic Image GenerationImitation LearningMachine VisionVision RoboticsVision Language ModelComputer ScienceDeep LearningComputer VisionComplex Language GroundingRoboticsNew Path
Recent studies in Vision-and-Language Navigation (VLN) train RL agents to execute natural-language navigation instructions in photorealistic environments, as a step towards robots that can follow human instructions. However, given the scarcity of human instruction data and limited diversity in the training environments, these agents still struggle with complex language grounding and spatial language understanding. Pretraining on large text and image-text datasets from the web has been extensively explored but the improvements are limited. We investigate large-scale augmentation with synthetic instructions. We take 500+ indoor environments captured in densely-sampled 360 ° panoramas, construct navigation trajectories through these panoramas, and generate a visually-grounded instruction for each trajectory using Marky [63], a high-quality multilingual navigation instruction generator. We also synthesize image observations from novel viewpoints using an image-to-image GAN [27]. The resulting dataset of 4.2M instruction-trajectory pairs is two orders of magnitude larger than existing human-annotated datasets, and contains a wider variety of environments and viewpoints. To efficiently leverage data at this scale, we train a simple transformer agent with imitation learning. On the challenging RxR dataset, our approach outperforms all existing RL agents, improving the state-of-the-art NDTW from 71.1 to 79.1 in seen environments, and from 64.6 to 66.8 in unseen test environments. Our work points to a new path to improving instruction-following agents, emphasizing large-scale training on near-human quality synthetic instructions.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1