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A practical guide to multi-objective reinforcement learning and planning

Version 2 2024-06-04, 15:51
Version 1 2023-06-26, 06:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 15:51 authored by CF Hayes, R Rădulescu, E Bargiacchi, J Källström, M Macfarlane, M Reymond, T Verstraeten, LM Zintgraf, Richard DazeleyRichard Dazeley, F Heintz, E Howley, AA Irissappane, P Mannion, A Nowé, G Ramos, M Restelli, P Vamplew, DM Roijers
Real-world sequential decision-making tasks are generally complex, requiring trade-offs between multiple, often conflicting, objectives. Despite this, the majority of research in reinforcement learning and decision-theoretic planning either assumes only a single objective, or that multiple objectives can be adequately handled via a simple linear combination. Such approaches may oversimplify the underlying problem and hence produce suboptimal results. This paper serves as a guide to the application of multi-objective methods to difficult problems, and is aimed at researchers who are already familiar with single-objective reinforcement learning and planning methods who wish to adopt a multi-objective perspective on their research, as well as practitioners who encounter multi-objective decision problems in practice. It identifies the factors that may influence the nature of the desired solution, and illustrates by example how these influence the design of multi-objective decision-making systems for complex problems.

History

Journal

Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems

Volume

36

Article number

26

Pagination

1-59

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1387-2532

eISSN

1573-7454

Language

eng

Notes

Conor F. Hayes and Roxana Rădulescu contributed equally to this work.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer