LGMLJun 1, 2020

Adversarial Attacks on Reinforcement Learning based Energy Management Systems of Extended Range Electric Delivery Vehicles

arXiv:2006.00817v19 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This highlights a security vulnerability in real-world transportation systems, which is incremental as it extends adversarial attack research to non-image-based DRL applications.

The paper investigates adversarial attacks on reinforcement learning-based energy management systems for electric delivery vehicles, showing that fast methods can significantly degrade performance with perturbed low-dimensional state inputs.

Adversarial examples are firstly investigated in the area of computer vision: by adding some carefully designed ''noise'' to the original input image, the perturbed image that cannot be distinguished from the original one by human, can fool a well-trained classifier easily. In recent years, researchers also demonstrated that adversarial examples can mislead deep reinforcement learning (DRL) agents on playing video games using image inputs with similar methods. However, although DRL has been more and more popular in the area of intelligent transportation systems, there is little research investigating the impacts of adversarial attacks on them, especially for algorithms that do not take images as inputs. In this work, we investigated several fast methods to generate adversarial examples to significantly degrade the performance of a well-trained DRL- based energy management system of an extended range electric delivery vehicle. The perturbed inputs are low-dimensional state representations and close to the original inputs quantified by different kinds of norms. Our work shows that, to apply DRL agents on real-world transportation systems, adversarial examples in the form of cyber-attack should be considered carefully, especially for applications that may lead to serious safety issues.

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