Fully Parameterized Quantile Function for Distributional Reinforcement Learning

November 05, 2019 ยท Entered Twilight ยท ๐Ÿ› Neural Information Processing Systems

๐ŸŒ… TWILIGHT: Old Age
Predates the code-sharing era โ€” a pioneer of its time

"Last commit was 5.0 years ago (โ‰ฅ5 year threshold)"

Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner

Repo contents: .DS_Store, .gitignore, CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md, CONTRIBUTING.md, LICENSE, README.md, SECURITY.md, dopamine, setup.py

Authors Derek Yang, Li Zhao, Zichuan Lin, Tao Qin, Jiang Bian, Tieyan Liu arXiv ID 1911.02140 Category cs.LG: Machine Learning Cross-listed cs.AI, stat.ML Citations 166 Venue Neural Information Processing Systems Repository https://github.com/microsoft/FQF โญ 47 Last Checked 2 months ago
Abstract
Distributional Reinforcement Learning (RL) differs from traditional RL in that, rather than the expectation of total returns, it estimates distributions and has achieved state-of-the-art performance on Atari Games. The key challenge in practical distributional RL algorithms lies in how to parameterize estimated distributions so as to better approximate the true continuous distribution. Existing distributional RL algorithms parameterize either the probability side or the return value side of the distribution function, leaving the other side uniformly fixed as in C51, QR-DQN or randomly sampled as in IQN. In this paper, we propose fully parameterized quantile function that parameterizes both the quantile fraction axis (i.e., the x-axis) and the value axis (i.e., y-axis) for distributional RL. Our algorithm contains a fraction proposal network that generates a discrete set of quantile fractions and a quantile value network that gives corresponding quantile values. The two networks are jointly trained to find the best approximation of the true distribution. Experiments on 55 Atari Games show that our algorithm significantly outperforms existing distributional RL algorithms and creates a new record for the Atari Learning Environment for non-distributed agents.
Community shame:
Not yet rated
Community Contributions

Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!

๐Ÿ“œ Similar Papers

In the same crypt โ€” Machine Learning