Offline Reinforcement Learning for Road Traffic Control
This work addresses urban mobility and environmental impact by enabling efficient traffic control without costly simulations, though it is incremental as it builds on prior offline RL methods.
The paper tackled traffic signal control by developing a model-based offline reinforcement learning framework that uses real traffic data to infer a Markov Decision Process with pessimistic costs, achieving highly performant policies in a data-efficient manner on a complex signalized roundabout.
Traffic signal control is an important problem in urban mobility with a significant potential of economic and environmental impact. While there is a growing interest in Reinforcement Learning (RL) for traffic signal control, the work so far has focussed on learning through simulations which could lead to inaccuracies due to simplifying assumptions. Instead, real experience data on traffic is available and could be exploited at minimal costs. Recent progress in offline or batch RL has enabled just that. Model-based offline RL methods, in particular, have been shown to generalize from the experience data much better than others. We build a model-based learning framework which infers a Markov Decision Process (MDP) from a dataset collected using a cyclic traffic signal control policy that is both commonplace and easy to gather. The MDP is built with pessimistic costs to manage out-of-distribution scenarios using an adaptive shaping of rewards which is shown to provide better regularization compared to the prior related work in addition to being PAC-optimal. Our model is evaluated on a complex signalized roundabout showing that it is possible to build highly performant traffic control policies in a data efficient manner.