Branden Ingram

AI
3papers
13citations
Novelty45%
AI Score38

3 Papers

ROJul 3, 2024Code
RobocupGym: A challenging continuous control benchmark in Robocup

Michael Beukman, Branden Ingram, Geraud Nangue Tasse et al.

Reinforcement learning (RL) has progressed substantially over the past decade, with much of this progress being driven by benchmarks. Many benchmarks are focused on video or board games, and a large number of robotics benchmarks lack diversity and real-world applicability. In this paper, we aim to simplify the process of applying reinforcement learning in the 3D simulation league of Robocup, a robotic football competition. To this end, we introduce a Robocup-based RL environment based on the open source rcssserver3d soccer server, simple pre-defined tasks, and integration with a popular RL library, Stable Baselines 3. Our environment enables the creation of high-dimensional continuous control tasks within a robotics football simulation. In each task, an RL agent controls a simulated Nao robot, and can interact with the ball or other agents. We open-source our environment and training code at https://github.com/Michael-Beukman/RobocupGym.

AIFeb 3, 2023
Hierarchically Composing Level Generators for the Creation of Complex Structures

Michael Beukman, Manuel Fokam, Marcel Kruger et al.

Procedural content generation (PCG) is a growing field, with numerous applications in the video game industry and great potential to help create better games at a fraction of the cost of manual creation. However, much of the work in PCG is focused on generating relatively straightforward levels in simple games, as it is challenging to design an optimisable objective function for complex settings. This limits the applicability of PCG to more complex and modern titles, hindering its adoption in industry. Our work aims to address this limitation by introducing a compositional level generation method that recursively composes simple low-level generators to construct large and complex creations. This approach allows for easily-optimisable objectives and the ability to design a complex structure in an interpretable way by referencing lower-level components. We empirically demonstrate that our method outperforms a non-compositional baseline by more accurately satisfying a designer's functional requirements in several tasks. Finally, we provide a qualitative showcase (in Minecraft) illustrating the large and complex, but still coherent, structures that were generated using simple base generators.

LGJan 30
Unsupervised Hierarchical Skill Discovery

Damion Harvey, Geraud Nangue Tasse, Branden Ingram et al.

We consider the problem of unsupervised skill segmentation and hierarchical structure discovery in reinforcement learning. While recent approaches have sought to segment trajectories into reusable skills or options, most rely on action labels, rewards, or handcrafted annotations, limiting their applicability. We propose a method that segments unlabelled trajectories into skills and induces a hierarchical structure over them using a grammar-based approach. The resulting hierarchy captures both low-level behaviours and their composition into higher-level skills. We evaluate our approach in high-dimensional, pixel-based environments, including Craftax and the full, unmodified version of Minecraft. Using metrics for skill segmentation, reuse, and hierarchy quality, we find that our method consistently produces more structured and semantically meaningful hierarchies than existing baselines. Furthermore, as a proof of concept for utility, we demonstrate that these discovered hierarchies accelerate and stabilise learning on downstream reinforcement learning tasks.