Yu Wu

h-index17
2papers
1,114citations

2 Papers

6.4LGOct 16, 2024
When to Trust Your Data: Enhancing Dyna-Style Model-Based Reinforcement Learning With Data Filter

Yansong Li, Zeyu Dong, Ertai Luo et al.

Reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms can be divided into two classes: model-free algorithms, which are sample-inefficient, and model-based algorithms, which suffer from model bias. Dyna-style algorithms combine these two approaches by using simulated data from an estimated environmental model to accelerate model-free training. However, their efficiency is compromised when the estimated model is inaccurate. Previous works address this issue by using model ensembles or pretraining the estimated model with data collected from the real environment, increasing computational and sample complexity. To tackle this issue, we introduce an out-of-distribution (OOD) data filter that removes simulated data from the estimated model that significantly diverges from data collected in the real environment. We show theoretically that this technique enhances the quality of simulated data. With the help of the OOD data filter, the data simulated from the estimated model better mimics the data collected by interacting with the real model. This improvement is evident in the critic updates compared to using the simulated data without the OOD data filter. Our experiment integrates the data filter into the model-based policy optimization (MBPO) algorithm. The results demonstrate that our method requires fewer interactions with the real environment to achieve a higher level of optimality than MBPO, even without a model ensemble.

8.1CLApr 30, 2016Code
Response Selection with Topic Clues for Retrieval-based Chatbots

Yu Wu, Wei Wu, Zhoujun Li et al.

We consider incorporating topic information into message-response matching to boost responses with rich content in retrieval-based chatbots. To this end, we propose a topic-aware convolutional neural tensor network (TACNTN). In TACNTN, matching between a message and a response is not only conducted between a message vector and a response vector generated by convolutional neural networks, but also leverages extra topic information encoded in two topic vectors. The two topic vectors are linear combinations of topic words of the message and the response respectively, where the topic words are obtained from a pre-trained LDA model and their weights are determined by themselves as well as the message vector and the response vector. The message vector, the response vector, and the two topic vectors are fed to neural tensors to calculate a matching score. Empirical study on a public data set and a human annotated data set shows that TACNTN can significantly outperform state-of-the-art methods for message-response matching.