LGJul 13, 2022
D-CBRS: Accounting For Intra-Class Diversity in Continual LearningYasin Findik, Farhad Pourkamali-Anaraki
Continual learning -- accumulating knowledge from a sequence of learning experiences -- is an important yet challenging problem. In this paradigm, the model's performance for previously encountered instances may substantially drop as additional data are seen. When dealing with class-imbalanced data, forgetting is further exacerbated. Prior work has proposed replay-based approaches which aim at reducing forgetting by intelligently storing instances for future replay. Although Class-Balancing Reservoir Sampling (CBRS) has been successful in dealing with imbalanced data, the intra-class diversity has not been accounted for, implicitly assuming that each instance of a class is equally informative. We present Diverse-CBRS (D-CBRS), an algorithm that allows us to consider within class diversity when storing instances in the memory. Our results show that D-CBRS outperforms state-of-the-art memory management continual learning algorithms on data sets with considerable intra-class diversity.
MAFeb 12, 2024
Mixed Q-Functionals: Advancing Value-Based Methods in Cooperative MARL with Continuous Action DomainsYasin Findik, S. Reza Ahmadzadeh
Tackling multi-agent learning problems efficiently is a challenging task in continuous action domains. While value-based algorithms excel in sample efficiency when applied to discrete action domains, they are usually inefficient when dealing with continuous actions. Policy-based algorithms, on the other hand, attempt to address this challenge by leveraging critic networks for guiding the learning process and stabilizing the gradient estimation. The limitations in the estimation of true return and falling into local optima in these methods result in inefficient and often sub-optimal policies. In this paper, we diverge from the trend of further enhancing critic networks, and focus on improving the effectiveness of value-based methods in multi-agent continuous domains by concurrently evaluating numerous actions. We propose a novel multi-agent value-based algorithm, Mixed Q-Functionals (MQF), inspired from the idea of Q-Functionals, that enables agents to transform their states into basis functions. Our algorithm fosters collaboration among agents by mixing their action-values. We evaluate the efficacy of our algorithm in six cooperative multi-agent scenarios. Our empirical findings reveal that MQF outperforms four variants of Deep Deterministic Policy Gradient through rapid action evaluation and increased sample efficiency.