Teaching inverse reinforcement learners via features and demonstrations

Teaching inverse reinforcement learners via features and demonstrations

Abstract

Learning near-optimal behaviour from an expert's demonstrations typically relies on the assumption that the learner knows the features that the true reward function depends on. In this paper, we study the problem of learning from demonstrations in the setting where this is not the case, i.e., where there is a mismatch between the worldviews of the learner and the expert. We introduce a natural quantity, the teaching risk, which measures the potential suboptimality of policies that look optimal to the learner in this setting. We show that bounds on the teaching risk guarantee that the learner is able to find a near-optimal policy using standard algorithms based on inverse reinforcement learning. Based on these findings, we suggest a teaching scheme in which the expert can decrease the teaching risk by updating the learner's worldview, and thus ultimately enable her to find a near-optimal policy.

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Authors
  • Haug, Luis
  • Tschiatschek, Sebastian
  • Singla, Adish
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Shortfacts
Category
Paper in Conference Proceedings or in Workshop Proceedings (Paper)
Event Title
Thirty-second Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS) 2018
Divisions
Data Mining and Machine Learning
Event Location
Montreal, Canada
Event Type
Conference
Event Dates
03.-07.12.2018
Series Name
NIPS'18: Proceedings of the 32nd International Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems
Page Range
pp. 8473-8482
Date
2 December 2018
Official URL
https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.08926
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