A Cross-Field Review of State Abstraction for Markov Decision Processes

More Info
expand_more

Abstract

Complex real-world systems pose a significant challenge to decision making: an agent needs to explore a large environment, deal with incomplete or noisy information, generalize the experience and learn from feedback to act optimally. These processes demand vast representation capacity, thus putting a burden on the agent’s limited computational and storage resources. State abstraction enables effective solutions by forming concise representations of the agents world. As such, it has been widely investigated by several research communities which have produced a variety of different approaches. Nonetheless, relations among them still remain unseen or roughly defined. This hampers potential applications of solution methods whose scope remains limited to the specific abstraction context for which they have been designed. To this end, the goal of this paper is to organize the developed approaches and identify connections between abstraction schemes as a fundamental step towards methods generalization. As a second contribution we discuss general abstraction properties with the aim of supporting a unified perspective for state abstraction.

Files

Unknown license