Sample Efficient Reinforcement Learning with Partial Dynamics Knowledge

Authors

  • Meshal Alharbi Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Mardavij Roozbehani Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Munther Dahleh Massachusetts Institute of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v38i10.28953

Keywords:

ML: Reinforcement Learning

Abstract

The problem of sample complexity of online reinforcement learning is often studied in the literature without taking into account any partial knowledge about the system dynamics that could potentially accelerate the learning process. In this paper, we study the sample complexity of online Q-learning methods when some prior knowledge about the dynamics is available or can be learned efficiently. We focus on systems that evolve according to an additive disturbance model of the form S_{h+1} = ƒ(S_h, A_h) + W_h, where ƒ represents the underlying system dynamics, and W_h are unknown disturbances independent of states and actions. In the setting of finite episodic Markov decision processes with S states, A actions, and episode length H, we present an optimistic Q-learning algorithm that achieves Õ(Poly(H)√T) regret under perfect knowledge of ƒ, where T is the total number of interactions with the system. This is in contrast to the typical Õ(Poly(H)√SAT) regret for existing Q-learning methods. Further, if only a noisy estimate ƒ_hat of ƒ is available, our method can learn an approximately optimal policy in a number of samples that is independent of the cardinalities of state and action spaces. The sub-optimality gap depends on the approximation error ƒ_hat − ƒ, as well as the Lipschitz constant of the corresponding optimal value function. Our approach does not require modeling of the transition probabilities and enjoys the same memory complexity as model-free methods.

Published

2024-03-24

How to Cite

Alharbi, M., Roozbehani, M., & Dahleh, M. (2024). Sample Efficient Reinforcement Learning with Partial Dynamics Knowledge. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 38(10), 10804-10811. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v38i10.28953

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Machine Learning I