RL3: Boosting Meta Reinforcement Learning via RL inside RL2
Abstract
Meta reinforcement learning (Meta-RL) methods such as RL2 have emerged as promising approaches for learning data-efficient RL algorithms tailored to a given task distribution. However, they show poor asymptotic performance and struggle with out-of-distribution tasks because they rely on sequence models, such as recurrent neural networks or transformers, to process experiences rather than summarize them using general-purpose RL components such as value functions. In contrast, traditional RL algorithms are data-inefficient as they do not use domain knowledge, but do converge to an optimal policy in the limit. We propose RL3, a principled hybrid approach that incorporates action-values, learned per task via traditional RL, in the inputs to Meta-RL. We show that RL3 earns a greater cumulative reward in the long term compared to RL2 while drastically reducing meta-training time and generalizes better to out-of-distribution tasks. Experiments are conducted on Meta-RL benchmarks and custom discrete domains that exhibit a range of short-term, long-term, and complex dependencies.
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