Model-Based Reinforcement Learning with Value-Targeted Regression
This work addresses regret minimization in RL for researchers, providing a near-optimal algorithm with theoretical guarantees, though it is incremental as it builds on existing concepts like Eluder dimension.
The paper tackles model-based reinforcement learning for regret minimization by proposing an algorithm that uses value-targeted regression to construct consistent models and optimistic planning, achieving a regret bound of ̃O(d√(H^3T)) for linear mixtures, which is independent of the number of states or actions and close to a lower bound.
This paper studies model-based reinforcement learning (RL) for regret minimization. We focus on finite-horizon episodic RL where the transition model $P$ belongs to a known family of models $\mathcal{P}$, a special case of which is when models in $\mathcal{P}$ take the form of linear mixtures: $P_θ = \sum_{i=1}^{d} θ_{i}P_{i}$. We propose a model based RL algorithm that is based on optimism principle: In each episode, the set of models that are `consistent' with the data collected is constructed. The criterion of consistency is based on the total squared error of that the model incurs on the task of predicting \emph{values} as determined by the last value estimate along the transitions. The next value function is then chosen by solving the optimistic planning problem with the constructed set of models. We derive a bound on the regret, which, in the special case of linear mixtures, the regret bound takes the form $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(d\sqrt{H^{3}T})$, where $H$, $T$ and $d$ are the horizon, total number of steps and dimension of $θ$, respectively. In particular, this regret bound is independent of the total number of states or actions, and is close to a lower bound $Ω(\sqrt{HdT})$. For a general model family $\mathcal{P}$, the regret bound is derived using the notion of the so-called Eluder dimension proposed by Russo & Van Roy (2014).