SYLGMay 5, 2021

H-TD2: Hybrid Temporal Difference Learning for Adaptive Urban Taxi Dispatch

arXiv:2105.02138v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of efficient taxi dispatch for urban transportation systems, offering an incremental improvement with bounded sub-optimality and robustness to out-of-training events.

The paper tackles the problem of coordinating automated taxis in dynamic urban environments to minimize customer waiting times, achieving a 50% reduction in average waiting time in a Gridworld simulation and a 26% reduction in a real-world Chicago dataset during a baseball game.

We present H-TD2: Hybrid Temporal Difference Learning for Taxi Dispatch, a model-free, adaptive decision-making algorithm to coordinate a large fleet of automated taxis in a dynamic urban environment to minimize expected customer waiting times. Our scalable algorithm exploits the natural transportation network company topology by switching between two behaviors: distributed temporal-difference learning computed locally at each taxi and infrequent centralized Bellman updates computed at the dispatch center. We derive a regret bound and design the trigger condition between the two behaviors to explicitly control the trade-off between computational complexity and the individual taxi policy's bounded sub-optimality; this advances the state of the art by enabling distributed operation with bounded-suboptimality. Additionally, unlike recent reinforcement learning dispatch methods, this policy estimation is adaptive and robust to out-of-training domain events. This result is enabled by a two-step modelling approach: the policy is learned on an agent-agnostic, cell-based Markov Decision Process and individual taxis are coordinated using the learned policy in a distributed game-theoretic task assignment. We validate our algorithm against a receding horizon control baseline in a Gridworld environment with a simulated customer dataset, where the proposed solution decreases average customer waiting time by 50% over a wide range of parameters. We also validate in a Chicago city environment with real customer requests from the Chicago taxi public dataset where the proposed solution decreases average customer waiting time by 26% over irregular customer distributions during a 2016 Major League Baseball World Series game.

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