Goto

Collaborating Authors

 state policy


Action-Free Offline-to-Online RL via Discretised State Policies

Neggatu, Natinael Solomon, Houssineau, Jeremie, Montana, Giovanni

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Most existing offline RL methods presume the availability of action labels within the dataset, but in many practical scenarios, actions may be missing due to privacy, storage, or sensor limitations. We formalise the setting of action-free offline-to-online RL, where agents must learn from datasets consisting solely of $(s,r,s')$ tuples and later leverage this knowledge during online interaction. To address this challenge, we propose learning state policies that recommend desirable next-state transitions rather than actions. Our contributions are twofold. First, we introduce a simple yet novel state discretisation transformation and propose Offline State-Only DecQN (\algo), a value-based algorithm designed to pre-train state policies from action-free data. \algo{} integrates the transformation to scale efficiently to high-dimensional problems while avoiding instability and overfitting associated with continuous state prediction. Second, we propose a novel mechanism for guided online learning that leverages these pre-trained state policies to accelerate the learning of online agents. Together, these components establish a scalable and practical framework for leveraging action-free datasets to accelerate online RL. Empirical results across diverse benchmarks demonstrate that our approach improves convergence speed and asymptotic performance, while analyses reveal that discretisation and regularisation are critical to its effectiveness.


Mastering Memory Tasks with World Models

Samsami, Mohammad Reza, Zholus, Artem, Rajendran, Janarthanan, Chandar, Sarath

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Current model-based reinforcement learning (MBRL) agents struggle with long-term dependencies. This limits their ability to effectively solve tasks involving extended time gaps between actions and outcomes, or tasks demanding the recalling of distant observations to inform current actions. To improve temporal coherence, we integrate a new family of state space models (SSMs) in world models of MBRL agents to present a new method, Recall to Imagine (R2I). This integration aims to enhance both long-term memory and long-horizon credit assignment. Through a diverse set of illustrative tasks, we systematically demonstrate that R2I not only establishes a new state-of-the-art for challenging memory and credit assignment RL tasks, such as BSuite and POPGym, but also showcases superhuman performance in the complex memory domain of Memory Maze. At the same time, it upholds comparable performance in classic RL tasks, such as Atari and DMC, suggesting the generality of our method. We also show that R2I is faster than the state-of-the-art MBRL method, DreamerV3, resulting in faster wall-time convergence.


Perimeter Control Using Deep Reinforcement Learning: A Model-free Approach towards Homogeneous Flow Rate Optimization

Li, Xiaocan, Mercurius, Ray Coden, Taitler, Ayal, Wang, Xiaoyu, Noaeen, Mohammad, Sanner, Scott, Abdulhai, Baher

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Perimeter control maintains high traffic efficiency within protected regions by controlling transfer flows among regions to ensure that their traffic densities are below critical values. Existing approaches can be categorized as either model-based or model-free, depending on whether they rely on network transmission models (NTMs) and macroscopic fundamental diagrams (MFDs). Although model-based approaches are more data efficient and have performance guarantees, they are inherently prone to model bias and inaccuracy. For example, NTMs often become imprecise for a large number of protected regions, and MFDs can exhibit scatter and hysteresis that are not captured in existing model-based works. Moreover, no existing studies have employed reinforcement learning for homogeneous flow rate optimization in microscopic simulation, where spatial characteristics, vehicle-level information, and metering realizations -- often overlooked in macroscopic simulations -- are taken into account. To circumvent issues of model-based approaches and macroscopic simulation, we propose a model-free deep reinforcement learning approach that optimizes the flow rate homogeneously at the perimeter at the microscopic level. Results demonstrate that our model-free reinforcement learning approach without any knowledge of NTMs or MFDs can compete and match the performance of a model-based approach, and exhibits enhanced generalizability and scalability.