FLoRA: Sample-Efficient Preference-based RL via Low-Rank Style Adaptation of Reward Functions
Daniel Marta, Simon Holk, Miguel Vasco, Jens Lundell, Timon Homberger, Finn Busch, Olov Andersson, Danica Kragic, Iolanda Leite
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Preference-based reinforcement learning (PbRL) is a suitable approach for style adaptation of pre-trained robotic behavior: adapting the robot's policy to follow human user preferences while still being able to perform the original task. However, collecting preferences for the adaptation process in robotics is often challenging and time-consuming. In this work we explore the adaptation of pre-trained robots in the low-preference-data regime. We show that, in this regime, recent adaptation approaches suffer from catastrophic reward forgetting (CRF), where the updated reward model overfits to the new preferences, leading the agent to become unable to perform the original task. To mitigate CRF, we propose to enhance the original reward model with a small number of parameters (low-rank matrices) responsible for modeling the preference adaptation. Our evaluation shows that our method can efficiently and effectively adjust robotic behavior to human preferences across simulation benchmark tasks and multiple real-world robotic tasks.
Keywords
Related papers
Parallel Differentiable Reachability for Learning and Planning with Certified Neural Dynamics and Controllers
Keyi Shen, Glen Chou
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
Artificial Intelligence enhanced smart welding islands: Foundation models revolutionizing manufacturing
Xiwei Wu, Wei Wu, Qiqi Chen +6 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