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Learning Generative State Space Models for Active Inference

Authors :
Ozan Çatal
Samuel Wauthier
Cedric De Boom
Tim Verbelen
Bart Dhoedt
Source :
Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, Vol 14 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2020.

Abstract

In this paper we investigate the active inference framework as a means to enable autonomous behavior in artificial agents. Active inference is a theoretical framework underpinning the way organisms act and observe in the real world. In active inference, agents act in order to minimize their so called free energy, or prediction error. Besides being biologically plausible, active inference has been shown to solve hard exploration problems in various simulated environments. However, these simulations typically require handcrafting a generative model for the agent. Therefore we propose to use recent advances in deep artificial neural networks to learn generative state space models from scratch, using only observation-action sequences. This way we are able to scale active inference to new and challenging problem domains, whilst still building on the theoretical backing of the free energy principle. We validate our approach on the mountain car problem to illustrate that our learnt models can indeed trade-off instrumental value and ambiguity. Furthermore, we show that generative models can also be learnt using high-dimensional pixel observations, both in the OpenAI Gym car racing environment and a real-world robotic navigation task. Finally we show that active inference based policies are an order of magnitude more sample efficient than Deep Q Networks on RL tasks.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16625188
Volume :
14
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.104dbf9bfcc345ad8d3597bf7f00f6c2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2020.574372