On the Theory of Reinforcement Learning with Once-per-Episode Feedback
Niladri S. Chatterji, Aldo Pacchiano, Peter L. Bartlett, Michael I. Jordan
- Year
- 2021
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
We study a theory of reinforcement learning (RL) in which the learner receives binary feedback only once at the end of an episode. While this is an extreme test case for theory, it is also arguably more representative of real-world applications than the traditional requirement in RL practice that the learner receive feedback at every time step. Indeed, in many real-world applications of reinforcement learning, such as self-driving cars and robotics, it is easier to evaluate whether a learner's complete trajectory was either "good" or "bad," but harder to provide a reward signal at each step. To show that learning is possible in this more challenging setting, we study the case where trajectory labels are generated by an unknown parametric model, and provide a statistically and computationally efficient algorithm that achieves sublinear regret.
Keywords
Related papers
Parallel Differentiable Reachability for Learning and Planning with Certified Neural Dynamics and Controllers
Keyi Shen, Glen Chou
2026
Artificial Intelligence enhanced smart welding islands: Foundation models revolutionizing manufacturing
Xiwei Wu, Wei Wu, Qiqi Chen +6 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
A deep reinforcement learning and a dynamic graph neural network-based scheduling agent to control a multi-task robot
Hedi Boukamcha, Anas Neumann, Monia Rekik +3 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
LLM Agent-driven Automated DFA Assessment with Fine-tuning and AAS-based RAG
Jiaxin Liu, Xiaofeng Zhou, Suyang Yu +5 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026