LGAIROMLJun 4, 2019

Off-Policy Evaluation via Off-Policy Classification

arXiv:1906.01624v356 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of evaluating deep RL policies in real-world settings like robotics, where on-policy interactions are infeasible, by providing a more practical off-policy evaluation method, though it is incremental as it builds on existing OPE approaches.

The paper tackles the problem of costly model selection in deep reinforcement learning for real-world environments by proposing an off-policy evaluation metric that avoids environment models or importance sampling, framing it as a positive-unlabeled classification problem with the Q-function, and shows it outperforms baselines and reliably predicts policy performance in generalization scenarios like robotic manipulation.

In this work, we consider the problem of model selection for deep reinforcement learning (RL) in real-world environments. Typically, the performance of deep RL algorithms is evaluated via on-policy interactions with the target environment. However, comparing models in a real-world environment for the purposes of early stopping or hyperparameter tuning is costly and often practically infeasible. This leads us to examine off-policy policy evaluation (OPE) in such settings. We focus on OPE for value-based methods, which are of particular interest in deep RL, with applications like robotics, where off-policy algorithms based on Q-function estimation can often attain better sample complexity than direct policy optimization. Existing OPE metrics either rely on a model of the environment, or the use of importance sampling (IS) to correct for the data being off-policy. However, for high-dimensional observations, such as images, models of the environment can be difficult to fit and value-based methods can make IS hard to use or even ill-conditioned, especially when dealing with continuous action spaces. In this paper, we focus on the specific case of MDPs with continuous action spaces and sparse binary rewards, which is representative of many important real-world applications. We propose an alternative metric that relies on neither models nor IS, by framing OPE as a positive-unlabeled (PU) classification problem with the Q-function as the decision function. We experimentally show that this metric outperforms baselines on a number of tasks. Most importantly, it can reliably predict the relative performance of different policies in a number of generalization scenarios, including the transfer to the real-world of policies trained in simulation for an image-based robotic manipulation task.

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