Chang Yi

2papers

2 Papers

LGFeb 28, 2023
Policy Dispersion in Non-Markovian Environment

Bohao Qu, Xiaofeng Cao, Jielong Yang et al.

Markov Decision Process (MDP) presents a mathematical framework to formulate the learning processes of agents in reinforcement learning. MDP is limited by the Markovian assumption that a reward only depends on the immediate state and action. However, a reward sometimes depends on the history of states and actions, which may result in the decision process in a non-Markovian environment. In such environments, agents receive rewards via temporally-extended behaviors sparsely, and the learned policies may be similar. This leads the agents acquired with similar policies generally overfit to the given task and can not quickly adapt to perturbations of environments. To resolve this problem, this paper tries to learn the diverse policies from the history of state-action pairs under a non-Markovian environment, in which a policy dispersion scheme is designed for seeking diverse policy representation. Specifically, we first adopt a transformer-based method to learn policy embeddings. Then, we stack the policy embeddings to construct a dispersion matrix to induce a set of diverse policies. Finally, we prove that if the dispersion matrix is positive definite, the dispersed embeddings can effectively enlarge the disagreements across policies, yielding a diverse expression for the original policy embedding distribution. Experimental results show that this dispersion scheme can obtain more expressive diverse policies, which then derive more robust performance than recent learning baselines under various learning environments.

LGMar 11, 2018
Interpreting Deep Classifier by Visual Distillation of Dark Knowledge

Kai Xu, Dae Hoon Park, Chang Yi et al.

Interpreting black box classifiers, such as deep networks, allows an analyst to validate a classifier before it is deployed in a high-stakes setting. A natural idea is to visualize the deep network's representations, so as to "see what the network sees". In this paper, we demonstrate that standard dimension reduction methods in this setting can yield uninformative or even misleading visualizations. Instead, we present DarkSight, which visually summarizes the predictions of a classifier in a way inspired by notion of dark knowledge. DarkSight embeds the data points into a low-dimensional space such that it is easy to compress the deep classifier into a simpler one, essentially combining model compression and dimension reduction. We compare DarkSight against t-SNE both qualitatively and quantitatively, demonstrating that DarkSight visualizations are more informative. Our method additionally yields a new confidence measure based on dark knowledge by quantifying how unusual a given vector of predictions is.