Alibaba, the Chinese tech giant, recently introduced its inaugural set of artificial intelligence models designed for robots, as disclosed in a blog post on Monday, June 15th. The unveiling of the Qwen Robot Suite marks a departure from traditional chatbot applications towards the realm of physical AI. The suite is crafted to bridge the gap between vision and language comprehension and physical execution which is seen as a critical obstacle for embodied intelligence.
The Qwen Robot Suite comprises three distinct models, as outlined in the post. Qwen-RobotNav is aimed at helping robots navigate physical spaces effectively. On the other hand, Qwen-RobotWorld serves as a video “world model” enabling robots to anticipate the unfolding of scenarios in a physical setting. Lastly, Qwen-RobotManip transforms diverse robot data into a unified canonical format, facilitating broad-spectrum training across different embodiments. These models collectively facilitate a system where general intelligence seamlessly translates into physical actions.
This development emerges closely following reports that Alibaba Group has established a new business division, Token Foundry, to bolster its AI initiatives. Under the leadership of Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu, Token Foundry integrates Alibaba’s Tongyi Lab and Future Life business segments and operates under the newly established Alibaba Token Hub. Concurrently, Nvidia also introduced Cosmos 3, a foundational model for physical AI last week, signaling significant advancements in physical AI technologies.
Distinguishing between language models and world foundation models is crucial in the realm of physical AI. While language models primarily learn from textual data, world foundation models derive insights from physical environments. For robots, mastering object manipulation requires exposure to millions of interaction scenarios, while autonomous vehicles necessitate training that involves rare and hazardous situations impractical to replicate in real-world settings. World foundation models address this challenge by generating synthetic training data that mirrors real-world physics, offering a cost-effective alternative to real-world testing.
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