Leveraging Sequentiality in Reinforcement Learning from a Single Demonstration
Alexandre Chenu, Olivier Serris, Olivier Sigaud, Nicolas Perrin-Gilbert
- Year
- 2022
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Deep Reinforcement Learning has been successfully applied to learn robotic control. However, the corresponding algorithms struggle when applied to problems where the agent is only rewarded after achieving a complex task. In this context, using demonstrations can significantly speed up the learning process, but demonstrations can be costly to acquire. In this paper, we propose to leverage a sequential bias to learn control policies for complex robotic tasks using a single demonstration. To do so, our method learns a goal-conditioned policy to control a system between successive low-dimensional goals. This sequential goal-reaching approach raises a problem of compatibility between successive goals: we need to ensure that the state resulting from reaching a goal is compatible with the achievement of the following goals. To tackle this problem, we present a new algorithm called DCIL-II. We show that DCIL-II can solve with unprecedented sample efficiency some challenging simulated tasks such as humanoid locomotion and stand-up as well as fast running with a simulated Cassie robot. Our method leveraging sequentiality is a step towards the resolution of complex robotic tasks under minimal specification effort, a key feature for the next generation of autonomous robots.
Keywords
Related papers
Trust Region Policy Optimization
John Schulman, Sergey Levine, Philipp Moritz +2 more
2015
Legged Robots That Balance
Marc H. Raibert, Ernest R. Tello
1986
Being there: putting brain, body, and world together again
1997
Small-scale soft-bodied robot with multimodal locomotion
Wenqi Hu, Guo Zhan Lum, Massimo Mastrangeli +1 more
2018