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ESE Seminar: “Demystifying the Efficiency of Reinforcement Learning: Two Recent Stories”

May 3, 2021 at 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Details
Date: May 3, 2021
Time: 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Event Category: Seminar
  • Event Tags:
  • Organizer
    Electrical and Systems Engineering
    Phone: 215-898-6823
    Venue
    https://upenn.zoom.us/j/96715197752

    Reinforcement learning (RL), which is frequently modeled as sequential learning and decision making in the face of uncertainty, is garnering growing interest in recent years due to its remarkable success in practice. In contemporary RL applications, it is increasingly more common to encounter environments with prohibitively large state and action space, thus imposing stringent requirements on the sample and computational efficiency of the RL algorithms in use. Despite the empirical success, however, the theoretical underpinnings for many popular RL algorithms remain highly inadequate even for the tabular setting.

    In this talk, we present two vignettes regarding the effectiveness of RL algorithms. The first vignette demonstrates that a perturbed model-based RL approach is minimax optimal under a generative model, without suffering from a sample size barrier that was present in all past work. The second vignette covers policy optimization in reinforcement learning. On the one hand, we demonstrate that the popular softmax policy gradient method can take exponential time to converge; on the other hand, employing natural policy gradients and enforcing entropy regularization provably achieve fast global convergence. These results cover two distinctive RL paradigms, and might shed light on the efficacy of these algorithms in more complicated scenarios.

    For the seminar link, email Danielle T. Kopicko at dtadros@seas.upenn.edu.