论文标题
ACME:分布式增强学习的研究框架
Acme: A Research Framework for Distributed Reinforcement Learning
论文作者
论文摘要
深厚的增强学习(RL)导致了许多最近和开创性的进步。但是,这些进步通常以培训的基础体系结构的规模增加以及用于训练它们的RL算法的复杂性提高而造成的。这些增长反过来又使研究人员难以快速原型新想法或复制已发表的RL算法。为了解决这些问题,这项工作描述了ACME,这是一个用于构建新型RL算法的框架,该算法是专门设计的,用于启用使用简单的模块化组件构建的代理,这些组件可以在各种执行范围内使用。尽管ACME的主要目标是为算法开发提供一个框架,但第二个目标是提供重要或最先进算法的简单参考实现。这些实现既是对我们的设计决策的验证,也是对RL研究中可重复性的重要贡献。在这项工作中,我们描述了ACME内部做出的主要设计决策,并提供了有关如何使用其组件来实施各种算法的更多详细信息。我们的实验为许多常见和最先进的算法提供了基准,并显示了如何为更大且更复杂的环境扩展这些算法。这突出了ACME的主要优点之一,即它可用于实现大型,分布式的RL算法,该算法可以以较大的尺度运行,同时仍保持该实现的固有可读性。 这项工作提出了第二篇文章的版本,该版本与模块化的增加相吻合,对离线,模仿和从演示算法学习以及作为ACME的一部分实现的各种新代理人进行了学习。
Deep reinforcement learning (RL) has led to many recent and groundbreaking advances. However, these advances have often come at the cost of both increased scale in the underlying architectures being trained as well as increased complexity of the RL algorithms used to train them. These increases have in turn made it more difficult for researchers to rapidly prototype new ideas or reproduce published RL algorithms. To address these concerns this work describes Acme, a framework for constructing novel RL algorithms that is specifically designed to enable agents that are built using simple, modular components that can be used at various scales of execution. While the primary goal of Acme is to provide a framework for algorithm development, a secondary goal is to provide simple reference implementations of important or state-of-the-art algorithms. These implementations serve both as a validation of our design decisions as well as an important contribution to reproducibility in RL research. In this work we describe the major design decisions made within Acme and give further details as to how its components can be used to implement various algorithms. Our experiments provide baselines for a number of common and state-of-the-art algorithms as well as showing how these algorithms can be scaled up for much larger and more complex environments. This highlights one of the primary advantages of Acme, namely that it can be used to implement large, distributed RL algorithms that can run at massive scales while still maintaining the inherent readability of that implementation. This work presents a second version of the paper which coincides with an increase in modularity, additional emphasis on offline, imitation and learning from demonstrations algorithms, as well as various new agents implemented as part of Acme.