JOURNAL ARTICLE

Cautiously-Optimistic Knowledge Sharing for Cooperative Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning

Yanwen BaXuan LiuXinning ChenHao WangYang XuKenli LiShigeng Zhang

Year: 2024 Journal:   Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence Vol: 38 (16)Pages: 17299-17307   Publisher: Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence

Abstract

While decentralized training is attractive in multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) for its excellent scalability and robustness, its inherent coordination challenges in collaborative tasks result in numerous interactions for agents to learn good policies. To alleviate this problem, action advising methods make experienced agents share their knowledge about what to do, while less experienced agents strictly follow the received advice. However, this method of sharing and utilizing knowledge may hinder the team's exploration of better states, as agents can be unduly influenced by suboptimal or even adverse advice, especially in the early stages of learning. Inspired by the fact that humans can learn not only from the success but also from the failure of others, this paper proposes a novel knowledge sharing framework called Cautiously-Optimistic kNowledge Sharing (CONS). CONS enables each agent to share both positive and negative knowledge and cautiously assimilate knowledge from others, thereby enhancing the efficiency of early-stage exploration and the agents' robustness to adverse advice. Moreover, considering the continuous improvement of policies, agents value negative knowledge more in the early stages of learning and shift their focus to positive knowledge in the later stages. Our framework can be easily integrated into existing Q-learning based methods without introducing additional training costs. We evaluate CONS in several challenging multi-agent tasks and find it excels in environments where optimal behavioral patterns are difficult to discover, surpassing the baselines in terms of convergence rate and final performance.

Keywords:
Reinforcement learning Reinforcement Computer science Knowledge management Artificial intelligence Psychology Social psychology

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4
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0.97
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
43
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0.66
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Topics

Reinforcement Learning in Robotics
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
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