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Which is the best intrinsic motivation signal for learning multiple skills?
Santucci, Vieri G; Baldassarre, Gianluca; Mirolli, Marco.
  • Santucci VG; Laboratory of Computational Embodied Neuroscience, Isituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Roma, Italy ; School of Computing and Mathematics, University of Plymouth Plymouth, UK.
Front Neurorobot ; 7: 22, 2013.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24273511
ABSTRACT
Humans and other biological agents are able to autonomously learn and cache different skills in the absence of any biological pressure or any assigned task. In this respect, Intrinsic Motivations (i.e., motivations not connected to reward-related stimuli) play a cardinal role in animal learning, and can be considered as a fundamental tool for developing more autonomous and more adaptive artificial agents. In this work, we provide an exhaustive analysis of a scarcely investigated

problem:

which kind of IM reinforcement signal is the most suitable for driving the acquisition of multiple skills in the shortest time? To this purpose we implemented an artificial agent with a hierarchical architecture that allows to learn and cache different skills. We tested the system in a setup with continuous states and actions, in particular, with a kinematic robotic arm that has to learn different reaching tasks. We compare the results of different versions of the system driven by several different intrinsic motivation signals. The results show (a) that intrinsic reinforcements purely based on the knowledge of the system are not appropriate to guide the acquisition of multiple skills, and (b) that the stronger the link between the IM signal and the competence of the system, the better the performance.
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