77.0GTMar 19
Interleaved Information Structures in Dynamic Games: A General Framework with Application to the Linear-Quadratic CaseJanani S K, Kushagra Gupta, Ufuk Topcu et al.
A fundamental problem in noncooperative dynamic game theory is the computation of Nash equilibria under different information structures, which specify the information available to each agent during decision-making. Prior work has extensively studied equilibrium solutions for two canonical information structures: feedback, where agents observe the current state at each time, and open-loop, where agents only observe the initial state. However, these paradigms are often too restrictive to capture realistic settings exhibiting interleaved information structures, in which each agent observes only a subset of other agents at every timestep. To date, there is no systematic framework for modeling and solving dynamic games under arbitrary interleaved information structures. To this end, we make two main contributions. First, we introduce a method to model deterministic dynamic games with arbitrary interleaved information structures as Mathematical Program Networks (MPNs), where the network structure encodes the informational dependencies between agents. Second, for linear-quadratic (LQ) dynamic games, we leverage the MPN formulation to develop a systematic procedure for deriving Riccati-like equations that characterize Nash equilibria. Finally, we illustrate our approach through an example involving three agents exhibiting a cyclic information structure.
LGSep 28, 2025Code
DiBS-MTL: Transformation-Invariant Multitask Learning with Direction OraclesSurya Murthy, Kushagra Gupta, Mustafa O. Karabag et al.
Multitask learning (MTL) algorithms typically rely on schemes that combine different task losses or their gradients through weighted averaging. These methods aim to find Pareto stationary points by using heuristics that require access to task loss values, gradients, or both. In doing so, a central challenge arises because task losses can be arbitrarily, nonaffinely scaled relative to one another, causing certain tasks to dominate training and degrade overall performance. A recent advance in cooperative bargaining theory, the Direction-based Bargaining Solution (DiBS), yields Pareto stationary solutions immune to task domination because of its invariance to monotonic nonaffine task loss transformations. However, the convergence behavior of DiBS in nonconvex MTL settings is currently not understood. To this end, we prove that under standard assumptions, a subsequence of DiBS iterates converges to a Pareto stationary point when task losses are possibly nonconvex, and propose DiBS-MTL, a computationally efficient adaptation of DiBS to the MTL setting. Finally, we validate DiBS-MTL empirically on standard MTL benchmarks, showing that it achieves competitive performance with state-of-the-art methods while maintaining robustness to nonaffine monotonic transformations that significantly degrade the performance of existing approaches, including prior bargaining-inspired MTL methods. Code available at https://github.com/suryakmurthy/dibs-mtl.
58.3LGMay 7
A Flow Matching Algorithm for Many-Shot Adaptation to Unseen DistributionsTyler Ingebrand, Ruihan Zhao, Kushagra Gupta et al.
While generative modeling has achieved remarkable success on tasks like natural language-conditioned image generation, enabling model adaptation from example data points remains a relatively underexplored and challenging problem. To this end, we propose Function Projection for Flow Matching (FP-FM), an algorithm that directly conditions generation on samples from the target distribution. FP-FM learns basis functions to span the velocity fields corresponding to a set of training distributions, and adapts to new distributions by computing a simple least-squares projection onto this basis. This enables efficient generation of samples from diverse target distributions without additional training at inference time. We further introduce multiple variants of FP-FM that provide a trade-off in expressivity and compute by enriching the coefficient calculation, e.g., by making the coefficients dependent on time. FP-FM achieves greatly improved precision and recall relative to baselines across synthetic and image-based datasets, with especially strong gains on unseen distributions.
ROOct 14, 2025
UNCAP: Uncertainty-Guided Planning Using Natural Language Communication for Cooperative Autonomous VehiclesNeel P. Bhatt, Po-han Li, Kushagra Gupta et al.
Safe large-scale coordination of multiple cooperative connected autonomous vehicles (CAVs) hinges on communication that is both efficient and interpretable. Existing approaches either rely on transmitting high-bandwidth raw sensor data streams or neglect perception and planning uncertainties inherent in shared data, resulting in systems that are neither scalable nor safe. To address these limitations, we propose Uncertainty-Guided Natural Language Cooperative Autonomous Planning (UNCAP), a vision-language model-based planning approach that enables CAVs to communicate via lightweight natural language messages while explicitly accounting for perception uncertainty in decision-making. UNCAP features a two-stage communication protocol: (i) an ego CAV first identifies the subset of vehicles most relevant for information exchange, and (ii) the selected CAVs then transmit messages that quantitatively express their perception uncertainty. By selectively fusing messages that maximize mutual information, this strategy allows the ego vehicle to integrate only the most relevant signals into its decision-making, improving both the scalability and reliability of cooperative planning. Experiments across diverse driving scenarios show a 63% reduction in communication bandwidth with a 31% increase in driving safety score, a 61% reduction in decision uncertainty, and a four-fold increase in collision distance margin during near-miss events. Project website: https://uncap-project.github.io/
CVMay 8, 2025
Real-Time Privacy Preservation for Robot Visual PerceptionMinkyu Choi, Yunhao Yang, Neel P. Bhatt et al.
Many robots (e.g., iRobot's Roomba) operate based on visual observations from live video streams, and such observations may inadvertently include privacy-sensitive objects, such as personal identifiers. Existing approaches for preserving privacy rely on deep learning models, differential privacy, or cryptography. They lack guarantees for the complete concealment of all sensitive objects. Guaranteeing concealment requires post-processing techniques and thus is inadequate for real-time video streams. We develop a method for privacy-constrained video streaming, PCVS, that conceals sensitive objects within real-time video streams. PCVS takes a logical specification constraining the existence of privacy-sensitive objects, e.g., never show faces when a person exists. It uses a detection model to evaluate the existence of these objects in each incoming frame. Then, it blurs out a subset of objects such that the existence of the remaining objects satisfies the specification. We then propose a conformal prediction approach to (i) establish a theoretical lower bound on the probability of the existence of these objects in a sequence of frames satisfying the specification and (ii) update the bound with the arrival of each subsequent frame. Quantitative evaluations show that PCVS achieves over 95 percent specification satisfaction rate in multiple datasets, significantly outperforming other methods. The satisfaction rate is consistently above the theoretical bounds across all datasets, indicating that the established bounds hold. Additionally, we deploy PCVS on robots in real-time operation and show that the robots operate normally without being compromised when PCVS conceals objects.
LGMar 7, 2025
A Multi-Fidelity Control Variate Approach for Policy Gradient EstimationXinjie Liu, Cyrus Neary, Kushagra Gupta et al.
Many reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms are impractical for deployment in operational systems or for training with computationally expensive high-fidelity simulations, as they require large amounts of data. Meanwhile, low-fidelity simulators -- such as reduced-order models, heuristic rewards, or generative world models -- can cheaply provide useful data for RL training, even if they are too coarse for zero-shot transfer. We propose multi-fidelity policy gradients (MFPGs), an RL framework that mixes a small amount of data from the target environment with a control variate formed from a large volume of low-fidelity simulation data to construct an unbiased, variance-reduced estimator for on-policy policy gradients. We instantiate the framework with a multi-fidelity variant of the classical REINFORCE algorithm. We show that under standard assumptions, the MFPG estimator guarantees asymptotic convergence of REINFORCE to locally optimal policies in the target environment, and achieves faster finite-sample convergence rates compared to training with high-fidelity data alone. Empirically, we evaluate the MFPG algorithm across a suite of simulated robotics benchmark tasks with limited high-fidelity data but abundant off-dynamics, low-fidelity data. With mild-moderate dynamics gaps, MFPG reliably improves the median performance over a high-fidelity-only baseline, matching the performance of leading multi-fidelity baselines despite its simplicity and minimal tuning overhead. Under large dynamics gaps, MFPG demonstrates the strongest robustness among the evaluated multi-fidelity approaches. An additional experiment shows that MFPG can remain effective even under low-fidelity reward misspecification. Thus, MFPG not only offers a novel paradigm for efficient sim-to-real transfer but also provides a principled approach to managing the trade-off between policy performance and data collection costs.
CRDec 5, 2013
Detection and prevention of botnets and malware in an enterprise networkManoj Rameshchandra Thakur, Divye Raj Khilnani, Kushagra Gupta et al.
One of the most significant threats faced by enterprise networks today is from Bots. A Bot is a program that operates as an agent for a user and runs automated tasks over the internet, at a much higher rate than would be possible for a human alone. A collection of Bots in a network, used for malicious purposes is referred to as a Botnet. Bot attacks can range from localized attacks like key-logging to network intensive attacks like Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS). In this paper, we suggest a novel approach that can detect and combat Bots. The proposed solution adopts a two pronged strategy which we have classified into the standalone algorithm and the network algorithm. The standalone algorithm runs independently on each node of the network. It monitors the active processes on the node and tries to identify Bot processes using parameters such as response time and output to input traffic ratio. If a suspicious process has been identified the network algorithm is triggered. The network algorithm will then analyze conversations to and from the hosts of the network using the transport layer flow records. It then tries to deduce the Bot pattern as well as Bot signatures which can subsequently be used by the standalone algorithm to thwart Bot processes at their very onset.