Continual Knowledge Adaptation for Reinforcement Learning

Abstract

Reinforcement Learning enables agents to learn optimal behaviors through interactions with environments. However, real-world environments are typically non-stationary, requiring agents to continuously adapt to new tasks and changing conditions. Although Continual Reinforcement Learning facilitates learning across multiple tasks, existing methods often suffer from catastrophic forgetting and inefficient knowledge utilization. To address these challenges, we propose Continual Knowledge Adaptation for Reinforcement Learning (CKA-RL), which enables the accumulation and effective utilization of historical knowledge. Specifically, we introduce a Continual Knowledge Adaptation strategy, which involves maintaining a task-specific knowledge vector pool and dynamically using historical knowledge to adapt the agent to new tasks. This process mitigates catastrophic forgetting and enables efficient knowledge transfer across tasks by preserving and adapting critical model parameters. Additionally, we propose an Adaptive Knowledge Merging mechanism that combines similar knowledge vectors to address scalability challenges, reducing memory requirements while ensuring the retention of essential knowledge. Experiments on three benchmarks demonstrate that the proposed CKA-RL outperforms state-of-the-art methods, achieving an improvement of 4.20% in overall performance and 8.02% in forward transfer. The source code is available at https://github.com/Fhujinwu/CKA-RL.

Cite

Text

Hu et al. "Continual Knowledge Adaptation for Reinforcement Learning." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 2025.

Markdown

[Hu et al. "Continual Knowledge Adaptation for Reinforcement Learning." Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 2025.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2025/hu2025neurips-continual/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{hu2025neurips-continual,
  title     = {{Continual Knowledge Adaptation for Reinforcement Learning}},
  author    = {Hu, Jinwu and Lian, ZiHao and Wen, Zhiquan and ChenghaoLi,  and Chen, Guohao and Wen, Xutao and Xiao, Bin and Tan, Mingkui},
  booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2025},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2025/hu2025neurips-continual/}
}