Embracing Evolution: A Call for Body-Control Co-Design in Embodied Humanoid Robot
By: Guiliang Liu , Bo Yue , Yi Jin Kim and more
Potential Business Impact:
Robots change shape and brain to do jobs better.
Humanoid robots, as general-purpose physical agents, must integrate both intelligent control and adaptive morphology to operate effectively in diverse real-world environments. While recent research has focused primarily on optimizing control policies for fixed robot structures, this position paper argues for evolving both control strategies and humanoid robots' physical structure under a co-design mechanism. Inspired by biological evolution, this approach enables robots to iteratively adapt both their form and behavior to optimize performance within task-specific and resource-constrained contexts. Despite its promise, co-design in humanoid robotics remains a relatively underexplored domain, raising fundamental questions about its feasibility and necessity in achieving true embodied intelligence. To address these challenges, we propose practical co-design methodologies grounded in strategic exploration, Sim2Real transfer, and meta-policy learning. We further argue for the essential role of co-design by analyzing it from methodological, application-driven, and community-oriented perspectives. Striving to guide and inspire future studies, we present open research questions, spanning from short-term innovations to long-term goals. This work positions co-design as a cornerstone for developing the next generation of intelligent and adaptable humanoid agents.
Similar Papers
Toward Humanoid Brain-Body Co-design: Joint Optimization of Control and Morphology for Fall Recovery
Robotics
Robots learn to recover from falls better.
Co-design is powerful and not free
Neural and Evolutionary Computing
Robots learn better by changing their bodies.
Soft yet Effective Robots via Holistic Co-Design
Robotics
Makes soft robots safer, stronger, and easier to build.