Optimization Fabrics
Nathan D. Ratliff, Karl Van Wyk, Mandy Xie, Anqi Li, Muhammad Asif, Rana

TL;DR
This paper introduces a theoretical framework called optimization fabrics, which are second-order differential equations encoding stable, structure-aware optimization behaviors that can be used for smooth, modular, and stable optimization and motion generation.
Contribution
It develops a comprehensive theory of optimization fabrics, especially geometric fabrics, that encode nonlinear geometries for stable, modular, and structure-aware optimization and motion control.
Findings
Optimization fabrics are inherently asymptotically stable.
Geometric fabrics can be combined and transformed while maintaining stability.
Application to robotic motion and learning policy generalization is discussed.
Abstract
This paper presents a theory of optimization fabrics, second-order differential equations that encode nominal behaviors on a space and can be used to define the behavior of a smooth optimizer. Optimization fabrics can encode commonalities among optimization problems that reflect the structure of the space itself, enabling smooth optimization processes to intelligently navigate each problem even when optimizing simple naive potential functions. Importantly, optimization over a fabric is inherently asymptotically stable. The majority of this paper is dedicated to the development of a tool set for the design and use of a broad class of fabrics called geometric fabrics. Geometric fabrics encode behavior as general nonlinear geometries which are covariant second-order differential equations with a special homogeneity property that ensures their behavior is independent of the system's speed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Differential Geometry Research · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Control and Dynamics of Mobile Robots
