Adaptive Importance Sampling for Control and Inference

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Abstract

Path integral (PI) control problems are a restricted class of non-linear control problems that can be solved formally as a Feynman–Kac PI and can be estimated using Monte Carlo sampling. In this contribution we review PI control theory in the finite horizon case. We subsequently focus on the problem how to compute and represent control solutions. We review the most commonly used methods in robotics and control. Within the PI theory, the question of how to compute becomes the question of importance sampling. Efficient importance samplers are state feedback controllers and the use of these requires an efficient representation. Learning and representing effective state-feedback controllers for non-linear stochastic control problems is a very challenging, and largely unsolved, problem. We show how to learn and represent such controllers using ideas from the cross entropy method. We derive a gradient descent method that allows to learn feed-back controllers using an arbitrary parametrisation. We refer to this method as the path integral cross entropy method or PICE. We illustrate this method for some simple examples. The PI control methods can be used to estimate the posterior distribution in latent state models. In neuroscience these problems arise when estimating connectivity from neural recording data using EM. We demonstrate the PI control method as an accurate alternative to particle filtering.

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Kappen, H. J., & Ruiz, H. C. (2016). Adaptive Importance Sampling for Control and Inference. Journal of Statistical Physics, 162(5), 1244–1266. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10955-016-1446-7

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