Visceral Machines: Risk-Aversion in Reinforcement Learning with Intrinsic Physiological Rewards

May 25, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› International Conference on Learning Representations

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Authors Daniel McDuff, Ashish Kapoor arXiv ID 1805.09975 Category cs.AI: Artificial Intelligence Citations 8 Venue International Conference on Learning Representations Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
As people learn to navigate the world, autonomic nervous system (e.g., "fight or flight") responses provide intrinsic feedback about the potential consequence of action choices (e.g., becoming nervous when close to a cliff edge or driving fast around a bend.) Physiological changes are correlated with these biological preparations to protect one-self from danger. We present a novel approach to reinforcement learning that leverages a task-independent intrinsic reward function trained on peripheral pulse measurements that are correlated with human autonomic nervous system responses. Our hypothesis is that such reward functions can circumvent the challenges associated with sparse and skewed rewards in reinforcement learning settings and can help improve sample efficiency. We test this in a simulated driving environment and show that it can increase the speed of learning and reduce the number of collisions during the learning stage.
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