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multi-agent-rldeep-rlad-hoc-teamwork
2023
Arrasy Rahman, Ignacio Carlucho, Niklas Höpner, Stefano V. Albrecht
A General Learning Framework for Open Ad Hoc Teamwork Using Graph-based Policy Learning
Journal of Machine Learning Research, 2023
Abstract | BibTex | arXiv | Publisher | Code
JMLRad-hoc-teamworkdeep-rlagent-modellingmulti-agent-rl
Abstract:
Open ad hoc teamwork is the problem of training a single agent to efficiently collaborate with an unknown group of teammates whose composition may change over time. A variable team composition creates challenges for the agent, such as the requirement to adapt to new team dynamics and dealing with changing state vector sizes. These challenges are aggravated in real-world applications where the controlled agent has no access to the full state of the environment. In this work, we develop a class of solutions for open ad hoc teamwork under full and partial observability. We start by developing a solution for the fully observable case that leverages graph neural network architectures to obtain an optimal policy based on reinforcement learning. We then extend this solution to partially observable scenarios by proposing different methodologies that maintain belief estimates over the latent environment states and team composition. These belief estimates are combined with our solution for the fully observable case to compute an agent's optimal policy under partial observability in open ad hoc teamwork. Empirical results demonstrate that our approach can learn efficient policies in open ad hoc teamwork in full and partially observable cases. Further analysis demonstrates that our methods' success is a result of effectively learning the effects of teammates' actions while also inferring the inherent state of the environment under partial observability.
@article{JRahman2022POGPL,
author = {Arrasy Rahman and Ignacio Carlucho and Niklas H\"opner and Stefano V. Albrecht},
title = {A General Learning Framework for Open Ad Hoc Teamwork Using Graph-based Policy Learning},
journal = {Journal of Machine Learning Research},
year = {2023},
volume = {24},
number = {298},
pages = {1--74},
url = {http://jmlr.org/papers/v24/22-099.html}
}
Arrasy Rahman, Elliot Fosong, Ignacio Carlucho, Stefano V. Albrecht
Generating Teammates for Training Robust Ad Hoc Teamwork Agents via Best-Response Diversity
Transactions on Machine Learning Research, 2023
Abstract | BibTex | arXiv | Code
TMLRad-hoc-teamworkmulti-agent-rldeep-rl
Abstract:
Ad hoc teamwork (AHT) is the challenge of designing a robust learner agent that effectively collaborates with unknown teammates without prior coordination mechanisms. Early approaches address the AHT challenge by training the learner with a diverse set of handcrafted teammate policies, usually designed based on an expert's domain knowledge about the policies the learner may encounter. However, implementing teammate policies for training based on domain knowledge is not always feasible. In such cases, recent approaches attempted to improve the robustness of the learner by training it with teammate policies generated by optimising information-theoretic diversity metrics. The problem with optimising existing information-theoretic diversity metrics for teammate policy generation is the emergence of superficially different teammates. When used for AHT training, superficially different teammate behaviours may not improve a learner's robustness during collaboration with unknown teammates. In this paper, we present an automated teammate policy generation method optimising the Best-Response Diversity (BRDiv) metric, which measures diversity based on the compatibility of teammate policies in terms of returns. We evaluate our approach in environments with multiple valid coordination strategies, comparing against methods optimising information-theoretic diversity metrics and an ablation not optimising any diversity metric. Our experiments indicate that optimising BRDiv yields a diverse set of training teammate policies that improve the learner's performance relative to previous teammate generation approaches when collaborating with near-optimal previously unseen teammate policies.
@article{rahman2023BRDiv,
title={Generating Teammates for Training Robust Ad Hoc Teamwork Agents via Best-Response Diversity},
author={Arrasy Rahman and Elliot Fosong and Ignacio Carlucho and Stefano V. Albrecht},
journal={Transactions on Machine Learning Research (TMLR)},
year={2023}
}
2022
Ibrahim H. Ahmed, Cillian Brewitt, Ignacio Carlucho, Filippos Christianos, Mhairi Dunion, Elliot Fosong, Samuel Garcin, Shangmin Guo, Balint Gyevnar, Trevor McInroe, Georgios Papoudakis, Arrasy Rahman, Lukas Schäfer, Massimiliano Tamborski, Giuseppe Vecchio, Cheng Wang, Stefano V. Albrecht
Deep Reinforcement Learning for Multi-Agent Interaction
AI Communications, 2022
Abstract | BibTex | arXiv | Publisher
AICsurveydeep-rlmulti-agent-rlad-hoc-teamworkagent-modellinggoal-recognitionsecurityexplainable-aiautonomous-driving
Abstract:
The development of autonomous agents which can interact with other agents to accomplish a given task is a core area of research in artificial intelligence and machine learning. Towards this goal, the Autonomous Agents Research Group develops novel machine learning algorithms for autonomous systems control, with a specific focus on deep reinforcement learning and multi-agent reinforcement learning. Research problems include scalable learning of coordinated agent policies and inter-agent communication; reasoning about the behaviours, goals, and composition of other agents from limited observations; and sample-efficient learning based on intrinsic motivation, curriculum learning, causal inference, and representation learning. This article provides a broad overview of the ongoing research portfolio of the group and discusses open problems for future directions.
@article{albrecht2022aic,
author = {Ahmed, Ibrahim H. and Brewitt, Cillian and Carlucho, Ignacio and Christianos, Filippos and Dunion, Mhairi and Fosong, Elliot and Garcin, Samuel and Guo, Shangmin and Gyevnar, Balint and McInroe, Trevor and Papoudakis, Georgios and Rahman, Arrasy and Schäfer, Lukas and Tamborski, Massimiliano and Vecchio, Giuseppe and Wang, Cheng and Albrecht, Stefano V.},
title = {Deep Reinforcement Learning for Multi-Agent Interaction},
journal = {AI Communications, Special Issue on Multi-Agent Systems Research in the UK},
year = {2022}
}