Optimal Actor-Critic Policy with Optimized Training Datasets
This addresses sampling inefficiency for reinforcement learning practitioners, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing actor-critic frameworks.
The paper tackles the low sampling efficiency problem in actor-critic reinforcement learning algorithms by proposing a strategy to optimize training datasets with fewer samples, resulting in superior performance and faster convergence compared to contemporary methods.
Actor-critic (AC) algorithms are known for their efficacy and high performance in solving reinforcement learning problems, but they also suffer from low sampling efficiency. An AC based policy optimization process is iterative and needs to frequently access the agent-environment system to evaluate and update the policy by rolling out the policy, collecting rewards and states (i.e. samples), and learning from them. It ultimately requires a huge number of samples to learn an optimal policy. To improve sampling efficiency, we propose a strategy to optimize the training dataset that contains significantly less samples collected from the AC process. The dataset optimization is made of a best episode only operation, a policy parameter-fitness model, and a genetic algorithm module. The optimal policy network trained by the optimized training dataset exhibits superior performance compared to many contemporary AC algorithms in controlling autonomous dynamical systems. Evaluation on standard benchmarks show that the method improves sampling efficiency, ensures faster convergence to optima, and is more data-efficient than its counterparts.