Toward Evaluating Robustness of Reinforcement Learning with Adversarial Policy
This addresses security vulnerabilities in deployed RL systems, though it appears to be an incremental improvement over existing adversarial policy methods.
The paper tackles the problem of evaluating reinforcement learning robustness against adversarial attacks by proposing IMAP, an intrinsically motivated adversarial policy that efficiently discovers vulnerabilities in both single- and multi-agent environments. The method decreases performance of state-of-the-art robust agents by 34%-54% in single-agent tasks and achieves an 83.91% attacking success rate in a multi-agent game.
Reinforcement learning agents are susceptible to evasion attacks during deployment. In single-agent environments, these attacks can occur through imperceptible perturbations injected into the inputs of the victim policy network. In multi-agent environments, an attacker can manipulate an adversarial opponent to influence the victim policy's observations indirectly. While adversarial policies offer a promising technique to craft such attacks, current methods are either sample-inefficient due to poor exploration strategies or require extra surrogate model training under the black-box assumption. To address these challenges, in this paper, we propose Intrinsically Motivated Adversarial Policy (IMAP) for efficient black-box adversarial policy learning in both single- and multi-agent environments. We formulate four types of adversarial intrinsic regularizers -- maximizing the adversarial state coverage, policy coverage, risk, or divergence -- to discover potential vulnerabilities of the victim policy in a principled way. We also present a novel bias-reduction method to balance the extrinsic objective and the adversarial intrinsic regularizers adaptively. Our experiments validate the effectiveness of the four types of adversarial intrinsic regularizers and the bias-reduction method in enhancing black-box adversarial policy learning across a variety of environments. Our IMAP successfully evades two types of defense methods, adversarial training and robust regularizer, decreasing the performance of the state-of-the-art robust WocaR-PPO agents by 34\%-54\% across four single-agent tasks. IMAP also achieves a state-of-the-art attacking success rate of 83.91\% in the multi-agent game YouShallNotPass. Our code is available at \url{https://github.com/x-zheng16/IMAP}.