ARC: Adversarially Robust Control Policies for Autonomous Vehicles
Kuutti, Sampo, Fallah, Saber, Bowden, Richard
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Deep neural networks have demonstrated their capability to learn control policies for a variety of tasks. However, these neural network-based policies have been shown to be susceptible to exploitation by adversarial agents. Therefore, there is a need to develop techniques to learn control policies that are robust against adversaries. We introduce Adversarially Robust Control (ARC), which trains the protagonist policy and the adversarial policy end-to-end on the same loss. The aim of the protagonist is to maximise this loss, whilst the adversary is attempting to minimise it. We demonstrate the proposed ARC training in a highway driving scenario, where the protagonist controls the follower vehicle whilst the adversary controls the lead vehicle. By training the protagonist against an ensemble of adversaries, it learns a significantly more robust control policy, which generalises to a variety of adversarial strategies. The approach is shown to reduce the amount of collisions against new adversaries by up to 90.25%, compared to the original policy. Moreover, by utilising an auxiliary distillation loss, we show that the fine-tuned control policy shows no drop in performance across its original training distribution.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jul-9-2021
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Surrey > Guildford (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Instructional Material > Course Syllabus & Notes (0.46)
- Industry:
- Automobiles & Trucks (1.00)
- Transportation > Ground
- Road (0.89)
- Technology: