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Closing the Train-Test Gap in World Models for Gradient-Based Planning

Published: December 10, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2512.09929v1

By: Arjun Parthasarathy , Nimit Kalra , Rohun Agrawal and more

Potential Business Impact:

Computers plan faster, like a video game.

Business Areas:
Simulation Software

World models paired with model predictive control (MPC) can be trained offline on large-scale datasets of expert trajectories and enable generalization to a wide range of planning tasks at inference time. Compared to traditional MPC procedures, which rely on slow search algorithms or on iteratively solving optimization problems exactly, gradient-based planning offers a computationally efficient alternative. However, the performance of gradient-based planning has thus far lagged behind that of other approaches. In this paper, we propose improved methods for training world models that enable efficient gradient-based planning. We begin with the observation that although a world model is trained on a next-state prediction objective, it is used at test-time to instead estimate a sequence of actions. The goal of our work is to close this train-test gap. To that end, we propose train-time data synthesis techniques that enable significantly improved gradient-based planning with existing world models. At test time, our approach outperforms or matches the classical gradient-free cross-entropy method (CEM) across a variety of object manipulation and navigation tasks in 10% of the time budget.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Repos / Data Links

Page Count
25 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Machine Learning (CS)