LGAIPLAug 31, 2021

Learning to Synthesize Programs as Interpretable and Generalizable Policies

arXiv:2108.13643v491 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for interpretable and generalizable policies in reinforcement learning, though it is incremental as it builds on prior work on programmatic policies.

The paper tackles the problem of neural network policies from deep reinforcement learning being non-interpretable and poor at generalization by learning to synthesize programs as policies solely from reward signals, and demonstrates that the framework outperforms DRL and program synthesis baselines while producing interpretable and more generalizable policies.

Recently, deep reinforcement learning (DRL) methods have achieved impressive performance on tasks in a variety of domains. However, neural network policies produced with DRL methods are not human-interpretable and often have difficulty generalizing to novel scenarios. To address these issues, prior works explore learning programmatic policies that are more interpretable and structured for generalization. Yet, these works either employ limited policy representations (e.g. decision trees, state machines, or predefined program templates) or require stronger supervision (e.g. input/output state pairs or expert demonstrations). We present a framework that instead learns to synthesize a program, which details the procedure to solve a task in a flexible and expressive manner, solely from reward signals. To alleviate the difficulty of learning to compose programs to induce the desired agent behavior from scratch, we propose to first learn a program embedding space that continuously parameterizes diverse behaviors in an unsupervised manner and then search over the learned program embedding space to yield a program that maximizes the return for a given task. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed framework not only learns to reliably synthesize task-solving programs but also outperforms DRL and program synthesis baselines while producing interpretable and more generalizable policies. We also justify the necessity of the proposed two-stage learning scheme as well as analyze various methods for learning the program embedding.

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