Improving Reinforcement Learning with Human Input
- Matthew Taylor | Washington State University
Although reinforcement learning (RL) has had many successes, significant amounts of time and/or data can be required to reach acceptable performance. If agents or robots are to be deployed in real world environments, it is critical that our algorithms take advantage of existing human knowledge. This talk will discuss a selection of our recent work that improves RL by leveraging 1) demonstrations and 2) reward feedback from imperfect users.
-
-
Ece Kamar
CVP and Lab Director of AI Frontiers
-
-
Series: Microsoft Research Talks
-
Decoding the Human Brain – A Neurosurgeon’s Experience
- Dr. Pascal O. Zinn
-
-
-
-
-
-
Challenges in Evolving a Successful Database Product (SQL Server) to a Cloud Service (SQL Azure)
- Hanuma Kodavalla,
- Phil Bernstein
-
Improving text prediction accuracy using neurophysiology
- Sophia Mehdizadeh
-
Tongue-Gesture Recognition in Head-Mounted Displays
- Tan Gemicioglu
-
DIABLo: a Deep Individual-Agnostic Binaural Localizer
- Shoken Kaneko
-
-
-
-
Audio-based Toxic Language Detection
- Midia Yousefi
-
-
From SqueezeNet to SqueezeBERT: Developing Efficient Deep Neural Networks
- Forrest Iandola,
- Sujeeth Bharadwaj
-
Hope Speech and Help Speech: Surfacing Positivity Amidst Hate
- Ashique Khudabukhsh
-
-
-
Towards Mainstream Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs)
- Brendan Allison
-
-
-
-
Learning Structured Models for Safe Robot Control
- Subramanian Ramamoorthy
-