LGOct 6, 2025

Wavelet Predictive Representations for Non-Stationary Reinforcement Learning

arXiv:2510.04507v1h-index: 13
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of limited adaptability in highly dynamic settings for reinforcement learning agents, representing an incremental advance by applying wavelet analysis to enhance NSRL methods.

The paper tackles the challenge of non-stationary reinforcement learning (NSRL) in dynamic environments by proposing WISDOM, which uses wavelet-domain predictive task representations to capture multi-scale features, resulting in significant improvements in sample efficiency and asymptotic performance over existing baselines.

The real world is inherently non-stationary, with ever-changing factors, such as weather conditions and traffic flows, making it challenging for agents to adapt to varying environmental dynamics. Non-Stationary Reinforcement Learning (NSRL) addresses this challenge by training agents to adapt rapidly to sequences of distinct Markov Decision Processes (MDPs). However, existing NSRL approaches often focus on tasks with regularly evolving patterns, leading to limited adaptability in highly dynamic settings. Inspired by the success of Wavelet analysis in time series modeling, specifically its ability to capture signal trends at multiple scales, we propose WISDOM to leverage wavelet-domain predictive task representations to enhance NSRL. WISDOM captures these multi-scale features in evolving MDP sequences by transforming task representation sequences into the wavelet domain, where wavelet coefficients represent both global trends and fine-grained variations of non-stationary changes. In addition to the auto-regressive modeling commonly employed in time series forecasting, we devise a wavelet temporal difference (TD) update operator to enhance tracking and prediction of MDP evolution. We theoretically prove the convergence of this operator and demonstrate policy improvement with wavelet task representations. Experiments on diverse benchmarks show that WISDOM significantly outperforms existing baselines in both sample efficiency and asymptotic performance, demonstrating its remarkable adaptability in complex environments characterized by non-stationary and stochastically evolving tasks.

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