Book Image

Hands-On Intelligent Agents with OpenAI Gym

By : Palanisamy P
Book Image

Hands-On Intelligent Agents with OpenAI Gym

By: Palanisamy P

Overview of this book

Many real-world problems can be broken down into tasks that require a series of decisions to be made or actions to be taken. The ability to solve such tasks without a machine being programmed requires a machine to be artificially intelligent and capable of learning to adapt. This book is an easy-to-follow guide to implementing learning algorithms for machine software agents in order to solve discrete or continuous sequential decision making and control tasks. Hands-On Intelligent Agents with OpenAI Gym takes you through the process of building intelligent agent algorithms using deep reinforcement learning starting from the implementation of the building blocks for configuring, training, logging, visualizing, testing, and monitoring the agent. You will walk through the process of building intelligent agents from scratch to perform a variety of tasks. In the closing chapters, the book provides an overview of the latest learning environments and learning algorithms, along with pointers to more resources that will help you take your deep reinforcement learning skills to the next level.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Planning with dynamic programming

Dynamic programming is a very general method to efficiently solve problems that can be decomposed into overlapping sub-problems. If you have used any type of recursive function in your code, you might have already got some preliminary flavor of dynamic programming. Dynamic programming, in simple terms, tries to cache or store the results of sub-problems so that they can be used later if required, instead of computing the results again.

Okay, so how is that relevant here, you may ask. Well, they are pretty useful for solving a fully defined MDP, which means that an agent can find the most optimal way to act in an environment to achieve the highest reward using dynamic programming if it has full knowledge of the MDP! In the following table, you will find a concise summary of what the inputs and outputs are when we are interested in sequential prediction...