LGFeb 4, 2024

Accelerating Inverse Reinforcement Learning with Expert Bootstrapping

arXiv:2402.02608v1h-index: 25
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a computational bottleneck in imitation learning for robotics and control, offering incremental improvements over existing methods.

The paper tackled the inefficiency of inverse reinforcement learning by better utilizing expert demonstrations to reduce exploration in the inner reinforcement learning loop, resulting in speedups of up to 18x in recovering expert performance on benchmark tasks.

Existing inverse reinforcement learning methods (e.g. MaxEntIRL, $f$-IRL) search over candidate reward functions and solve a reinforcement learning problem in the inner loop. This creates a rather strange inversion where a harder problem, reinforcement learning, is in the inner loop of a presumably easier problem, imitation learning. In this work, we show that better utilization of expert demonstrations can reduce the need for hard exploration in the inner RL loop, hence accelerating learning. Specifically, we propose two simple recipes: (1) placing expert transitions into the replay buffer of the inner RL algorithm (e.g. Soft-Actor Critic) which directly informs the learner about high reward states instead of forcing the learner to discover them through extensive exploration, and (2) using expert actions in Q value bootstrapping in order to improve the target Q value estimates and more accurately describe high value expert states. Our methods show significant gains over a MaxEntIRL baseline on the benchmark MuJoCo suite of tasks, speeding up recovery to 70\% of deterministic expert performance by 2.13x on HalfCheetah-v2, 2.6x on Ant-v2, 18x on Hopper-v2, and 3.36x on Walker2d-v2.

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