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RLBenchNet: The Right Network for the Right Reinforcement Learning Task

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Reinforcement learning (RL) has seen significant advancements through the application of various neural network architectures. In this study, we systematically investigate the performance of several neural networks in RL tasks, including Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), Multi-Layer Perceptron (MLP), Mamba/Mamba-2, Transformer-XL, Gated Transformer-XL, and Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU). Through comprehensive evaluation across continuous control, discrete decision-making, and memory-based environments, we identify architecture-specific strengths and limitations. Our results reveal that: (1) MLPs excel in fully observable continuous control tasks, providing an optimal balance of performance and efficiency; (2) recurrent architectures like LSTM and GRU offer robust performance in partially observable environments with moderate memory requirements; (3) Mamba models achieve a 4.5x higher throughput compared to LSTM and a 3.9x increase over GRU, all while maintaining comparable performance; and (4) only Transformer-XL, Gated Transformer-XL, and Mamba-2 successfully solve the most challenging memory-intensive tasks, with Mamba-2 requiring 8x less memory than Transformer-XL. These findings provide insights for researchers and practitioners, enabling more informed architecture selection based on specific task characteristics and computational constraints. Code is available at: https://github.com/SafeRL-Lab/RLBenchNet


Recurrent Linear Transformers

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The self-attention mechanism in the transformer architecture is capable of capturing long-range dependencies and it is the main reason behind its effectiveness in processing sequential data. Nevertheless, despite their success, transformers have two significant drawbacks that still limit their broader applicability: (1) In order to remember past information, the self-attention mechanism requires access to the whole history to be provided as context. (2) The inference cost in transformers is expensive. In this paper we introduce recurrent alternatives to the transformer self-attention mechanism that offer a context-independent inference cost, leverage long-range dependencies effectively, and perform well in practice. We evaluate our approaches in reinforcement learning problems where the aforementioned computational limitations make the application of transformers nearly infeasible. We quantify the impact of the different components of our architecture in a diagnostic environment and assess performance gains in 2D and 3D pixel-based partially-observable environments. When compared to a state-of-the-art architecture, GTrXL, inference in our approach is at least 40% cheaper while reducing memory use in more than 50%. Our approach either performs similarly or better than GTrXL, improving more than 37% upon GTrXL performance on harder tasks.


CoBERL: Contrastive BERT for Reinforcement Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Many reinforcement learning (RL) agents require a large amount of experience to solve tasks. We propose Contrastive BERT for RL (CoBERL), an agent that combines a new contrastive loss and a hybrid LSTM-transformer architecture to tackle the challenge of improving data efficiency. CoBERL enables efficient, robust learning from pixels across a wide range of domains. We use bidirectional masked prediction in combination with a generalization of recent contrastive methods to learn better representations for transformers in RL, without the need of hand engineered data augmentations. We find that CoBERL consistently improves performance across the full Atari suite, a set of control tasks and a challenging 3D environment.


Graph Convolutional Memory for Deep Reinforcement Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Solving partially-observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs) is critical when applying deep reinforcement learning (DRL) to real-world robotics problems, where agents have an incomplete view of the world. We present graph convolutional memory (GCM) for solving POMDPs using deep reinforcement learning. Unlike recurrent neural networks (RNNs) or transformers, GCM embeds domain-specific priors into the memory recall process via a knowledge graph. By encapsulating priors in the graph, GCM adapts to specific tasks but remains applicable to any DRL task. Using graph convolutions, GCM extracts hierarchical graph features, analogous to image features in a convolutional neural network (CNN). We show GCM outperforms long short-term memory (LSTM), gated transformers for reinforcement learning (GTrXL), and differentiable neural computers (DNCs) on control, long-term non-sequential recall, and 3D navigation tasks while using significantly fewer parameters.


Stabilizing Transformers for Reinforcement Learning

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

A BSTRACT Owing to their ability to both effectively integrate information over long time horizons and scale to massive amounts of data, self-attention architectures have recently shown breakthrough success in natural language processing (NLP), achieving state-of-the-art results in domains such as language modeling and machine translation. Harnessing the transformer's ability to process long time horizons of information could provide a similar performance boost in partially observable reinforcement learning (RL) domains, but the large-scale transformers used in NLP have yet to be successfully applied to the RL setting. In this work we demonstrate that the standard transformer architecture is difficult to optimize, which was previously observed in the supervised learning setting but becomes especially pronounced with RL objectives. We propose architectural modifications that substantially improve the stability and learning speed of the original Transformer and XL variant. The proposed architecture, the Gated Transformer-XL (GTrXL), surpasses LSTMs on challenging memory environments and achieves state-of-the-art results on the multi-task DMLab-30 benchmark suite, exceeding the performance of an external memory architecture. We show that the GTrXL, trained using the same losses, has stability and performance that consistently matches or exceeds a competitive LSTM baseline, including on more reactive tasks where memory is less critical. GTrXL offers an easy-to-train, simple-to-implement but substantially more expressive architectural alternative to the standard multi-layer LSTM ubiquitously used for RL agents in partially observable environments. Recent work has empirically validated these claims, demonstrating that self-attention architectures can provide significant gains in performance over the more traditional recurrent architectures such as the LSTM (Dai et al., 2019; Radford et al., 2019; Devlin et al., 2019; Y ang et al., 2019). The repeated success of the transformer architecture in domains where sequential information processing is critical to performance makes it an ideal candidate for partially observable RL problems, where episodes can extend to thousands of steps and the critical observations for any decision often DeepMind and Machine Learning Department, Carnegie Mellon University. 1 arXiv:1910.06764v1 Y et, the RL literature is dominated by the use of LSTMs as the main mechanism for providing memory to the agent (Espeholt et al., 2018; Kapturowski et al., 2019; Mnih et al., 2016).