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Reinforcement Learning Agent Training with Goals for Real World Tasks

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 Added by Xuan Zhao
 Publication date 2021
and research's language is English




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Reinforcement Learning (RL) is a promising approach for solving various control, optimization, and sequential decision making tasks. However, designing reward functions for complex tasks (e.g., with multiple objectives and safety constraints) can be challenging for most users and usually requires multiple expensive trials (reward function hacking). In this paper we propose a specification language (Inkling Goal Specification) for complex control and optimization tasks, which is very close to natural language and allows a practitioner to focus on problem specification instead of reward function hacking. The core elements of our framework are: (i) mapping the high level language to a predicate temporal logic tailored to control and optimization tasks, (ii) a novel automaton-guided dense reward generation that can be used to drive RL algorithms, and (iii) a set of performance metrics to assess the behavior of the system. We include a set of experiments showing that the proposed method provides great ease of use to specify a wide range of real world tasks; and that the reward generated is able to drive the policy training to achieve the specified goal.



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