RL policies decompose into information-regularized primitives that compete by requesting state information amounts, with the greediest one acting, yielding better generalization than flat or hierarchical baselines.
Learning Independent Causal Mechanisms
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Statistical learning relies upon data sampled from a distribution, and we usually do not care what actually generated it in the first place. From the point of view of causal modeling, the structure of each distribution is induced by physical mechanisms that give rise to dependences between observables. Mechanisms, however, can be meaningful autonomous modules of generative models that make sense beyond a particular entailed data distribution, lending themselves to transfer between problems. We develop an algorithm to recover a set of independent (inverse) mechanisms from a set of transformed data points. The approach is unsupervised and based on a set of experts that compete for data generated by the mechanisms, driving specialization. We analyze the proposed method in a series of experiments on image data. Each expert learns to map a subset of the transformed data back to a reference distribution. The learned mechanisms generalize to novel domains. We discuss implications for transfer learning and links to recent trends in generative modeling.
fields
cs.LG 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Reinforcement Learning with Competitive Ensembles of Information-Constrained Primitives
RL policies decompose into information-regularized primitives that compete by requesting state information amounts, with the greediest one acting, yielding better generalization than flat or hierarchical baselines.