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Transfer via inter-task mappings in policy search reinforcement learning

Matthew E. Taylor, Shimon Whiteson, Peter Stone

Year
2007
Citations
133

Abstract

The ambitious goal of transfer learning is to accelerate learning on a target task after training on a different, but related, source task. While many past transfer methods have focused on transferring value-functions, this paper presents a method for transferring policies across tasks with different state and action spaces. In particular, this paper utilizes transfer via inter-task mappings for policy search methods (TVITM-PS) to construct a transfer functional that translates a population of neural network policies trained via policy search from a source task to a target task. Empirical results in robot soccer Keepaway and Server Job Scheduling show that TVITM-PS can markedly reduce learning time when full inter-task mappings are available. The results also demonstrate that TVITMPS still succeeds when given only incomplete inter-task mappings. Furthermore, we present a novel method for learning such mappings when they are not available, and give results showing they perform comparably to hand-coded mappings.

Keywords

Reinforcement learningComputer scienceTransfer of learningTask (project management)Task analysisArtificial intelligenceMachine learningNegative transferMulti-task learningPopulation

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