The Primacy Bias in Deep Reinforcement Learning
Abstract
This work identifies a common flaw of deep reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms: a tendency to rely on early interactions and ignore useful evidence encountered later. Because of training on progressively growing datasets, deep RL agents incur a risk of overfitting to earlier experiences, negatively affecting the rest of the learning process. Inspired by cognitive science, we refer to this effect as the primacy bias. Through a series of experiments, we dissect the algorithmic aspects of deep RL that exacerbate this bias. We then propose a simple yet generally-applicable mechanism that tackles the primacy bias by periodically resetting a part of the agent. We apply this mechanism to algorithms in both discrete (Atari 100k) and continuous action (DeepMind Control Suite) domains, consistently improving their performance.
Cite
Text
Nikishin et al. "The Primacy Bias in Deep Reinforcement Learning." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2022.Markdown
[Nikishin et al. "The Primacy Bias in Deep Reinforcement Learning." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2022.](https://mlanthology.org/icml/2022/nikishin2022icml-primacy/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{nikishin2022icml-primacy,
title = {{The Primacy Bias in Deep Reinforcement Learning}},
author = {Nikishin, Evgenii and Schwarzer, Max and D’Oro, Pierluca and Bacon, Pierre-Luc and Courville, Aaron},
booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning},
year = {2022},
pages = {16828-16847},
volume = {162},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/icml/2022/nikishin2022icml-primacy/}
}