A Joint Learning and Communication Framework for Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning over Noisy Channels

Tung, Tze-Yang, Pujol, Joan Roig, Kobus, Szymon, Gunduz, Deniz

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

We propose a novel formulation of the "effectiveness problem" in communications, put forth by Shannon and Weaver in their seminal work [2], by considering multiple agents communicating over a noisy channel in order to achieve better coordination and cooperation in a multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) framework. Specifically, we consider a multi-agent partially observable Markov decision process (MA-POMDP), in which the agents, in addition to interacting with the environment can also communicate with each other over a noisy communication channel. The noisy communication channel is considered explicitly as part of the dynamics of the environment and the message each agent sends is part of the action that the agent can take. As a result, the agents learn not only to collaborate with each other but also to communicate "effectively" over a noisy channel. This framework generalizes both the traditional communication problem, where the main goal is to convey a message reliably over a noisy channel, and the "learning to communicate" framework that has received recent attention in the MARL literature, where the underlying communication channels are assumed to be error-free. We show via examples that the joint policy learned using the proposed framework is superior to that where the communication is considered separately from the underlying MA-POMDP. This is a very powerful framework, which has many real world applications, from autonomous vehicle planning to drone swarm control, and opens up the rich toolbox of deep reinforcement learning for the design of multi-user communication systems. This work was supported in part by the European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant BEACON (grant agreement no. An earlier version of this work was presented at the IEEE Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM) in December 2020 [1]. Communication is essential for our society. Humans use language to communicate ideas, which has given rise to complex social structures, and scientists have observed either gestural or vocal communication in other animal groups, complexity of which increases with the complexity of the social structure of the group [3].

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