From Inference Efficiency to Embodied Efficiency: Revisiting Efficiency Metrics for Vision-Language-Action Models
arXiv cs.LG / 3/20/2026
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Key Points
- The paper argues that standard efficiency metrics such as parameters, FLOPs, or token decoding throughput do not reflect real-world embodied efficiency on robotic platforms.
- It shows that system-level metrics—task completion time, trajectory smoothness, cumulative joint rotation, and motion energy—provide a more accurate view of policy performance in embodied tasks.
- Through controlled studies on model compression, token sparsification, and action sequence compression, the authors find that reducing computation under conventional metrics can increase end-to-end cost or degrade motion quality even if task success rates remain high.
- The findings indicate that common adaptation methods like in-context prompting or supervised fine-tuning yield only mild, metric-specific improvements in embodied efficiency and can trade off other performance aspects such as completion time.
- The work advocates incorporating embodied efficiency into evaluations to enable fairer, more comprehensive comparisons of VLA models across real-world robotic tasks.
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