Alapfogalmak
Factoring action spaces and employing value decomposition, as exemplified by DecQN, significantly improves the efficiency and performance of offline reinforcement learning in complex environments, particularly when dealing with limited or suboptimal data.
Kivonat
Bibliographic Information:
Beeson, A., Ireland, D., Montana, G. (2024). An Investigation of Offline Reinforcement Learning in Factorisable Action Spaces. arXiv preprint arXiv:2411.11088.
Research Objective:
This paper investigates the effectiveness of offline reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms in factorisable action spaces, focusing on mitigating the challenges of overestimation bias inherent in offline settings.
Methodology:
The authors adapt existing offline RL techniques, including BCQ, CQL, IQL, and One-Step RL, to a factorisable action space framework using DecQN for value decomposition. They introduce a new benchmark suite comprising maze navigation and discretized DeepMind Control Suite tasks with varying complexity and dataset quality (expert, medium, mixed). Performance is evaluated based on normalized scores achieved by trained agents in simulated environments.
Key Findings:
- Factoring action spaces and employing value decomposition significantly improves the sample efficiency and performance of offline RL compared to atomic action representations.
- Decoupled offline RL methods consistently outperform behavioral cloning across various tasks and dataset qualities.
- DecQN-CQL demonstrates advantages in lower-dimensional environments, while DecQN-IQL and DecQN-OneStep excel in higher-dimensional tasks.
- Learning from datasets with limited expert trajectories remains challenging, especially in complex environments.
Main Conclusions:
This study highlights the benefits of factorisation and value decomposition for offline RL in factorisable action spaces. The proposed DecQN-based algorithms demonstrate promising results, paving the way for efficient offline learning in complex real-world applications with structured action spaces.
Significance:
This research contributes significantly to the field of offline RL by addressing the challenges of large, factorisable action spaces, a common characteristic of real-world problems. The proposed methods and benchmark provide a valuable foundation for future research and development in this area.
Limitations and Future Research:
- The study primarily focuses on a limited set of environments and offline RL algorithms.
- Future research could explore alternative value decomposition methods, advanced behavior policy modeling, and automatic hyperparameter tuning for improved performance and generalization across diverse tasks.
- Developing more realistic benchmark environments with complex sub-action dependencies would further advance the field.
Statisztikák
For the "cheetah-run" task, as the number of sub-actions (ni) increased, DQN-CQL's performance declined significantly, while DecQN-CQL remained relatively stable.
In the Maze task with 15 actuators, DecQN-CQL trained over 8 times faster and used 7 times less GPU memory compared to DQN-CQL.
For the Maze task, DecQN-CQL showed an advantage when the number of actuators was between 3 and 12, while DecQN-IQL/OneStep performed better with 15 actuators.
In the DeepMind Control Suite tasks, DecQN-CQL generally performed better in lower-dimensional tasks, while DecQN-IQL/OneStep excelled in higher-dimensional tasks.
Idézetek
"In this work, we undertake an initial investigation into offline RL in factorisable action spaces."
"To the best of our knowledge, this investigation represents the first formative analysis of offline RL in factorisable action spaces."
"We believe our work helps pave the way for developments in this important domain, whilst also contributing to the growing field of offline RL more generally."