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An operator view of policy gradient methods

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 Added by Dibya Ghosh
 Publication date 2020
and research's language is English




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We cast policy gradient methods as the repeated application of two operators: a policy improvement operator $mathcal{I}$, which maps any policy $pi$ to a better one $mathcal{I}pi$, and a projection operator $mathcal{P}$, which finds the best approximation of $mathcal{I}pi$ in the set of realizable policies. We use this framework to introduce operator-bas



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We use functional mirror ascent to propose a general framework (referred to as FMA-PG) for designing policy gradient methods. The functional perspective distinguishes between a policys functional representation (what are its sufficient statistics) and its parameterization (how are these statistics represented) and naturally results in computationally efficient off-policy updates. For simple policy parameterizations, the FMA-PG framework ensures that the optimal policy is a fixed point of the updates. It also allows us to handle complex policy parameterizations (e.g., neural networks) while guaranteeing policy improvement. Our framework unifies several PG methods and opens the way for designing sample-efficient variants of existing methods. Moreover, it recovers important implementation heuristics (e.g., using forward vs reverse KL divergence) in a principled way. With a softmax functional representation, FMA-PG results in a variant of TRPO with additional desirable properties. It also suggests an improved variant of PPO, whose robustness and efficiency we empirically demonstrate on MuJoCo. Via experiments on simple reinforcement learning problems, we evaluate algorithms instantiated by FMA-PG.
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