AI seminar: An analytic solution to discrete Bayesian reinforcement learning

Friday, February 17, 2006 11:30 am - 11:30 am EST (GMT -05:00)

Speaker: Pascal Poupart

Reinforcement learning (RL) was originally proposed as a framework to allow agents to learn in an online fashion as they interact with their environment. Existing RL algorithms come short of achieving this goal because the amount of exploration required is often too costly and/or too time consuming for online learning. As a result, RL is mostly used for offline learning in simulated environments. We propose a new algorithm, called BEETLE, for effective online learning that is computationally efficient while minimizing the amount of exploration. We take a Bayesian model-based approach, framing RL as a partially observable Markov decision process. Our two main contributions are the analytical derivation that the optimal value function is the upper envelope of a set of multivariate polynomials, and an efficient point-based value iteration algorithm that exploits this simple parameterization.

This is joint work with Nikos Vlassis (University of Amsterdam), Jesse Hoey (University of Toronto) and Kevin Regan (University of Waterloo).

Food: Greg Hines