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Vision-Language-Action in Robotics: A Survey of Datasets, Benchmarks, and Data Engines

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abstract

Despite remarkable progress in Vision--Language--Action (VLA) models, a central bottleneck remains underexamined: the data infrastructure that underlies embodied learning. In this survey, we argue that future advances in VLA will depend less on model architecture and more on the co-design of high-fidelity data engines and structured evaluation protocols. To this end, we present a systematic, data-centric analysis of VLA research organized around three pillars: datasets, benchmarks, and data engines. For datasets, we categorize real-world and synthetic corpora along embodiment diversity, modality composition, and action space formulation, revealing a persistent fidelity-cost trade-off that fundamentally constrains large-scale collection. For benchmarks, we analyze task complexity and environment structure jointly, exposing structural gaps in compositional generalization and long-horizon reasoning evaluation that existing protocols fail to address. For data engines, we examine simulation-based, video-reconstruction, and automated task-generation paradigms, identifying their shared limitations in physical grounding and sim-to-real transfer. Synthesizing these analyses, we distill four open challenges: representation alignment, multimodal supervision, reasoning assessment, and scalable data generation. Addressing them, we argue, requires treating data infrastructure as a first-class research problem rather than a background concern.

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cs.RO 1

years

2026 1

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  • Drop-Then-Recovery: How Redundant Are Vision-Language-Action Models? cs.RO · 2026-06-26 · accept · none · ref 47 · internal anchor

    VLA language backbones show high redundancy on manipulation benchmarks, with half the LLM blocks removable and even two blocks sufficient to recover baseline performance after fine-tuning, unlike vision and action pathways.