Abstract

Learning from demonstration provides an attractive solution to the problem of teaching autonomous systems how to perform complex tasks. Reward learning from demonstration is a promising method of inferring a rich and transferable representation of the demonstrator's intents, but current algorithms suffer from intractability and inefficiency in large domains due to the assumption that the demonstrator is maximizing a single reward function throughout the whole task. This paper takes a different perspective by assuming that the reward function behind an unsegmented demonstration is actually composed of several distinct subtasks chained together. Leveraging this assumption, a Bayesian nonparametric reward-learning framework is presented that infers multiple subgoals and reward functions within a single unsegmented demonstration. The new framework is developed for discrete state spaces and also general continuous demonstration domains using Gaussian process reward representations. The algorithm is shown to have both performance and computational advantages over existing inverse reinforcement learning methods. Experimental results are given in both cases, demonstrating the ability to learn challenging maneuvers from demonstration on a quadrotor and a remote-controlled car.

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