Value-based subgoal discovery and path planning for reaching long-horizon goals

Learning to reach long-horizon goals in spatial traversal tasks is a significant challenge for autonomous agents. Recent subgoal graph-based planning methods address this challenge by decomposing a goal into a sequence of shorter-horizon subgoals. These methods, however, use arbitrary heuristics for...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pateria, Shubham, Subagdja, Budhitama, Tan, Ah-Hwee, Quek, Chai
Other Authors: School of Computer Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170579
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Learning to reach long-horizon goals in spatial traversal tasks is a significant challenge for autonomous agents. Recent subgoal graph-based planning methods address this challenge by decomposing a goal into a sequence of shorter-horizon subgoals. These methods, however, use arbitrary heuristics for sampling or discovering subgoals, which may not conform to the cumulative reward distribution. Moreover, they are prone to learning erroneous connections (edges) between subgoals, especially those lying across obstacles. To address these issues, this article proposes a novel subgoal graph-based planning method called learning subgoal graph using value-based subgoal discovery and automatic pruning (LSGVP). The proposed method uses a subgoal discovery heuristic that is based on a cumulative reward (value) measure and yields sparse subgoals, including those lying on the higher cumulative reward paths. Moreover, LSGVP guides the agent to automatically prune the learned subgoal graph to remove the erroneous edges. The combination of these novel features helps the LSGVP agent to achieve higher cumulative positive rewards than other subgoal sampling or discovery heuristics, as well as higher goal-reaching success rates than other state-of-the-art subgoal graph-based planning methods.