Machine Learning Latest Submitted Preprints | 2019-07-15

in #machine5 years ago

Machine Learning


RL-RRT: Kinodynamic Motion Planning via Learning Reachability Estimators from RL Policies (1907.04799v2)

Hao-Tien Lewis Chiang, Jasmine Hsu, Marek Fiser, Lydia Tapia, Aleksandra Faust

2019-07-10

This paper addresses two challenges facing sampling-based kinodynamic motion planning: a way to identify good candidate states for local transitions and the subsequent computationally intractable steering between these candidate states. Through the combination of sampling-based planning, a Rapidly Exploring Randomized Tree (RRT) and an efficient kinodynamic motion planner through machine learning, we propose an efficient solution to long-range planning for kinodynamic motion planning. First, we use deep reinforcement learning to learn an obstacle-avoiding policy that maps a robot's sensor observations to actions, which is used as a local planner during planning and as a controller during execution. Second, we train a reachability estimator in a supervised manner, which predicts the RL policy's time to reach a state in the presence of obstacles. Lastly, we introduce RL-RRT that uses the RL policy as a local planner, and the reachability estimator as the distance function to bias tree-growth towards promising regions. We evaluate our method on three kinodynamic systems, including physical robot experiments. Results across all three robots tested indicate that RL-RRT outperforms state of the art kinodynamic planners in efficiency, and also provides a shorter path finish time than a steering function free method. The learned local planner policy and accompanying reachability estimator demonstrate transferability to the previously unseen experimental environments, making RL-RRT fast because the expensive computations are replaced with simple neural network inference. Video:

Augmenting Neural Nets with Symbolic Synthesis: Applications to Few-Shot Learning (1907.05878v1)

Adithya Murali, P. Madhusudan

2019-07-12

We propose symbolic learning as extensions to standard inductive learning models such as neural nets as a means to solve few shot learning problems. We device a class of visual discrimination puzzles that calls for recognizing objects and object relationships as well learning higher-level concepts from very few images. We propose a two-phase learning framework that combines models learned from large data sets using neural nets and symbolic first-order logic formulas learned from a few shot learning instance. We develop first-order logic synthesis techniques for discriminating images by using symbolic search and logic constraint solvers. By augmenting neural nets with them, we develop and evaluate a tool that can solve few shot visual discrimination puzzles with interpretable concepts.

Equiprobable mappings in weighted constraint grammars (1907.05839v1)

Arto Anttila, Scott Borgeson, Giorgio Magri

2019-07-12

We show that MaxEnt is so rich that it can distinguish between any two different mappings: there always exists a nonnegative weight vector which assigns them different MaxEnt probabilities. Stochastic HG instead does admit equiprobable mappings and we give a complete formal characterization of them. We compare these different predictions of the two frameworks on a test case of Finnish stress.

Dual Extrapolation for Sparse Generalized Linear Models (1907.05830v1)

Mathurin Massias, Samuel Vaiter, Alexandre Gramfort, Joseph Salmon

2019-07-12

Generalized Linear Models (GLM) form a wide class of regression and classification models, where prediction is a function of a linear combination of the input variables. For statistical inference in high dimension, sparsity inducing regularizations have proven to be useful while offering statistical guarantees. However, solving the resulting optimization problems can be challenging: even for popular iterative algorithms such as coordinate descent, one needs to loop over a large number of variables. To mitigate this, techniques known as screening rules and working sets diminish the size of the optimization problem at hand, either by progressively removing variables, or by solving a growing sequence of smaller problems. For both techniques, significant variables are identified thanks to convex duality arguments. In this paper, we show that the dual iterates of a GLM exhibit a Vector AutoRegressive (VAR) behavior after sign identification, when the primal problem is solved with proximal gradient descent or cyclic coordinate descent. Exploiting this regularity, one can construct dual points that offer tighter certificates of optimality, enhancing the performance of screening rules and helping to design competitive working set algorithms.

Explainable Machine Learning for Scientific Insights and Discoveries (1905.08883v2)

Ribana Roscher, Bastian Bohn, Marco F. Duarte, Jochen Garcke

2019-05-21

Machine learning methods have been remarkably successful for a wide range of application areas in the extraction of essential information from data. An exciting and relatively recent development is the uptake of machine learning in the natural sciences, where the major goal is to obtain novel scientific insights and discoveries from observational or simulated data. A prerequisite for obtaining a scientific outcome is domain knowledge, which is needed to gain explainability, but also to enhance scientific consistency. In this article we review explainable machine learning in view of applications in the natural sciences and discuss three core elements which we identified as relevant in this context: transparency, interpretability, and explainability. With respect to these core elements, we provide a survey of recent scientific works incorporating machine learning, and in particular to the way that explainable machine learning is used in their respective application areas.

Compositionally-Warped Gaussian Processes (1906.09665v2)

Gonzalo Rios, Felipe Tobar

2019-06-23

The Gaussian process (GP) is a nonparametric prior distribution over functions indexed by time, space, or other high-dimensional index set. The GP is a flexible model yet its limitation is given by its very nature: it can only model Gaussian marginal distributions. To model non-Gaussian data, a GP can be warped by a nonlinear transformation (or warping) as performed by warped GPs (WGPs) and more computationally-demanding alternatives such as Bayesian WGPs and deep GPs. However, the WGP requires a numerical approximation of the inverse warping for prediction, which increases the computational complexity in practice. To sidestep this issue, we construct a novel class of warpings consisting of compositions of multiple elementary functions, for which the inverse is known explicitly. We then propose the compositionally-warped GP (CWGP), a non-Gaussian generative model whose expressiveness follows from its deep compositional architecture, and its computational efficiency is guaranteed by the analytical inverse warping. Experimental validation using synthetic and real-world datasets confirms that the proposed CWGP is robust to the choice of warpings and provides more accurate point predictions, better trained models and shorter computation times than WGP.

Automated Real-time Anomaly Detection in Human Trajectories using Sequence to Sequence Networks (1907.05813v1)

Giorgos Bouritsas, Stelios Daveas, Antonios Danelakis, Constantinos Rizogiannis, Stelios C. A. Thomopoulos

2019-07-12

Detection of anomalous trajectories is an important problem with potential applications to various domains, such as video surveillance, risk assessment, vessel monitoring and high-energy physics. Modeling the distribution of trajectories with statistical approaches has been a challenging task due to the fact that such time series are usually non stationary and highly dimensional. However, modern machine learning techniques provide robust approaches for data-driven modeling and critical information extraction. In this paper, we propose a Sequence to Sequence architecture for real-time detection of anomalies in human trajectories, in the context of risk-based security. Our detection scheme is tested on a synthetic dataset of diverse and realistic trajectories generated by the ISL iCrowd simulator. The experimental results indicate that our scheme accurately detects motion patterns that deviate from normal behaviors and is promising for future real-world applications.

Improving the Projection of Global Structures in Data through Spanning Trees (1907.05783v1)

Daniel Alcaide, Jan Aerts

2019-07-12

The connection of edges in a graph generates a structure that is independent of a coordinate system. This visual metaphor allows creating a more flexible representation of data than a two-dimensional scatterplot. In this work, we present STAD (Spanning Trees as Approximation of Data), a dimensionality reduction method to approximate the high-dimensional structure into a graph with or without formulating prior hypotheses. STAD generates an abstract representation of high-dimensional data by giving each data point a location in a graph which preserves the distances in the original high-dimensional space. The STAD graph is built upon the Minimum Spanning Tree (MST) to which new edges are added until the correlation between the distances from the graph and the original dataset is maximized. Additionally, STAD supports the inclusion of additional functions to focus the exploration and allow the analysis of data from new perspectives, emphasizing traits in data which otherwise would remain hidden. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method by applying it to two real-world datasets: traffic density in Barcelona and temporal measurements of air quality in Castile and Le'on in Spain.

Optimistic Adaptive Acceleration for Optimization (1903.01435v2)

Jun-Kun Wang, Xiaoyun Li, Ping Li

2019-03-04

AMSGrad is a popular adaptive gradient based optimization algorithm that is widely used in training deep neural networks. The new variant assumes that minibatch gradients in consecutive iterations have some underlying structure, which makes the gradients sequentially predictable. By exploiting the predictability and some ideas from Optimistic Online learning, the proposed algorithm can accelerate the convergence and also enjoys a tighter regret bound. We evaluate Optimistic-AMSGrad and AMSGrad in terms of various performance measures (i.e., training loss, testing loss, and classification accuracy on training/testing data), which demonstrate that Optimistic-AMSGrad improves AMSGrad.

Exploration by Optimisation in Partial Monitoring (1907.05772v1)

Tor Lattimore, Csaba Szepesvari

2019-07-12

We provide a simple and efficient algorithm for adversarial -action -outcome non-degenerate locally observable partial monitoring games for which the -round minimax regret is bounded by , matching the best known information-theoretic upper bounds.