Project 3: Reinforcement Learning Instructions

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Project 3: Reinforcement Learning
capsuleClassic layout
Pac-Man seeks reward.
Should he eat or should he run?
When in doubt, q-learn.

Introduction
In this project, you will implement value iteration and q-learning. You will test your agents first on Gridworld (from
class), then apply them to a simulated robot controller (Crawler) and Pac-Man.
The code for this project contains the following files, which are available on eCommons as a zip archive.
Files you will edit

valueIterationAgents.py

A value iteration agent for solving known MDPs.

qlearningAgents.py

Q-learning agents for Gridworld, Crawler and Pac-Man

analysis.py

A file to put your answers to questions given in the project.

Files you should read but NOT edit

mdp.py

Defines methods on general MDPs.

learningAgents.py

Defines the base classes ValueEstimationAgent and QLearningAgent, which your
agents will extend.

util.py

Utilities, including util.Counter , which is particularly useful for q-learners.

gridworld.py

The Gridworld implementation

featureExtractors.py

Classes for extracting features on (state,action) pairs. Used for the approximate qlearning agent (in qlearningAgents.py).

Files you can ignore

environment.py

Abstract class for general reinforcement learning environments. Used by
gridworld.py .

graphicsGridworldDisplay.py

Gridworld graphical display.

graphicsUtils.py

Graphics utilities.

textGridworldDisplay.py

Plug-in for the Gridworld text interface.

crawler.py

The crawler code and test harness. You will run this but not edit it.

graphicsCrawlerDisplay.py

GUI for the crawler robot.

What to submit: You will fill in portions of valueIterationAgents.py, qlearningAgents.py, and analysis.py
during the assignment. You should submit only these files. Please don't change any others.
How/Where to submit:
You should submit all of the required files ( valueIterationAgents.py, qlearningAgents.py, and analysis.py)
file (and other supporting files) with your code and comments on the CMPS140 autograder server:
http://cmps140.soe.ucsc.edu/p3/submit.html
Your submission should be placed in a Zip archive titled solution.zip . On Unix systems, you can zip your
solution with the following command:
zip solution.zip valueIterationAgents.py qlearningAgents.py analysis.py

If you have supporting files (file1.py, file2.py, etc.) you can Zip them by adding the names of those files as
additional arguments:
zip solution.zip valueIterationAgents.py qlearningAgents.py analysis.py file1.py file2.py ...

Evaluation: Your code will be autograded for technical correctness. Please do not change the names of any
provided functions or classes within the code, or you will wreak havoc on the autograder. However, the correctness
of your implementation -- not the autograder's judgements -- will be the final judge of your score. If necessary, under
very extraordinary circumstances, we may review and grade assignments individually to ensure that you receive due
credit for your work.
The grading scheme is as follows:
Correctness (25 points): This is the portion of the grade we derive from the auto-grader. Note that the auto-grader
assigns partial credit to solutions that are correct but do not perform as well (based on some specified criteria) as the
best-proposed solution to date. This is the core of the assignment.
Documentation/Style (5 points): Additionally, we will assign 5 points based on the detail of your comments for
sections of code that you edit.
Academic Dishonesty: We will be checking your code against other submissions in the class for logical
redundancy. If you copy someone else's code and submit it with minor changes, we will know. These cheat
detectors are quite hard to fool, so please don't try. We trust you all to submit your own work only; please don't let
us down. If you do, we will pursue the strongest consequences available to us.
Getting Help: You are not alone! If you find yourself stuck on something, use the discussion boards or go to office
hours. We want these projects to be rewarding and instructional, not frustrating and demoralizing.
Forums: Post your questions (but not project solutions) on Piazza.
Collaboration Policy You can collaborate, but you still need to do the final work independently, turn in your own
code, and you are responsible for understanding every line written and submitted.
Running code on the UCSC Unix Servers: In order to run the Pac-Man code on the Unix servers, you must first
make sure you have an Xwindow server installed on your local machine. For Mac OS X, you will want to install
XQuartz (http://www.xquartz.org/). For Windows, we recommend installing Xming and follow this installation
guide, http://www.geo.mtu.edu/geoschem/docs/putty_install.html. Once you have an Xwindow server installed, you
must ssh with the -X flag to enable graphics forwarding, as follows:
ssh -X cruzID@unix.ic.usc.edu

To verify that you have installed the Xserver correctly and the graphics forwarding is turned on, run the following
command for a graphics demonstration:
xeyes

MDPs
To get started, run Gridworld in manual control mode, which uses the arrow keys:
python gridworld.py -m

You will see the two-exit layout from class. The blue dot is the agent. Note that when you press up, the agent only
actually moves north 80% of the time. Such is the life of a Gridworld agent!
You can control many aspects of the simulation. A full list of options is available by running:
python gridworld.py -h

The default agent moves randomly
python gridworld.py -g MazeGrid

You should see the random agent bounce around the grid until it happens upon an exit. Not the finest hour for an AI
agent.
Note: The Gridworld MDP is such that you first must enter a pre-terminal state (the double boxes shown in the
GUI) and then take the special 'exit' action before the episode actually ends (in the true terminal state called
TERMINAL_STATE, which is not shown in the GUI). If you run an episode manually, your total return may be less
than you expected, due to the discount rate (-d to change; 0.9 by default).
Look at the console output that accompanies the graphical output (or use -t for all text). You will be told about
each transition the agent experiences (to turn this off, use -q).
As in Pac-Man, positions are represented by (x,y) Cartesian coordinates and any arrays are indexed by [x][y],
with 'north' being the direction of increasing y, etc. By default, most transitions will receive a reward of zero,
though you can change this with the living reward option (-r).
Question 1 (6 points) Write a value iteration agent in ValueIterationAgent, which has been partially specified for
you in valueIterationAgents.py. Your value iteration agent is an offline planner, not a reinforcement agent, and
so the relevant training option is the number of iterations of value iteration it should run (option -i) in its initial
planning phase. ValueIterationAgent takes an MDP on construction and runs value iteration for the specified
number of iterations before the constructor returns.
Value iteration computes k-step estimates of the optimal values, Vk . In addition to running value iteration,
implement the following methods for ValueIterationAgent using V k .
getValue(state) returns the value of a state.
getPolicy(state) returns the best action according to computed values.
getQValue(state, action) returns the q-value of the (state, action) pair.

These quantities are all displayed in the GUI: values are numbers in squares, q-values are numbers in square
quarters, and policies are arrows out from each square.
Important: Use the "batch" version of value iteration where each vector V k is computed from a fixed vector V k-1
(like in lecture), not the "online" version where one single weight vector is updated in place. The difference is
discussed in Sutton & Barto in the 6th paragraph of chapter 4.1.
Note: A policy synthesized from values of depth k (which reflect the next k rewards) will actually reflect the next
k+1 rewards (i.e. you return πk+1). Similarly, the q-values will also reflect one more reward than the values (i.e. you
return Qk+1). You may assume that 100 iterations is enough for convergence in the questions below.
The following command loads your ValueIterationAgent, which will compute a policy and execute it 10 times.
Press a key to cycle through values, q-values, and the simulation. You should find that the value of the start state
(V(start)) and the empirical resulting average reward are quite close.

python gridworld.py -a value -i 100 -k 10

Hint: On the default BookGrid, running value iteration for 5 iterations should give you this output:
python gridworld.py -a value -i 5

value iteration with k=5
Your value iteration agent will be graded on a new grid. We will check your values, q-values, and policies after
fixed numbers of iterations and at convergence (e.g. after 100 iterations).
Hint: Use the util.Counter class in util.py , which is a dictionary with a default value of zero. Methods such as
totalCount should simplify your code. However, be careful with argMax: the actual argmax you want may be a key
not in the counter!
Question 2 (1 point) On BridgeGrid with the default discount of 0.9 and the default noise of 0.2, the optimal policy
does not cross the bridge. Change only ONE of the discount and noise parameters so that the optimal policy causes
the agent to attempt to cross the bridge. Put your answer in question2() of analysis.py. (Noise refers to how
often an agent ends up in an unintended successor state when they perform an action.) The default corresponds to:
python gridworld.py -a value -i 100 -g BridgeGrid --discount 0.9 --noise 0.2

Question 3 (5 points) Consider the DiscountGrid layout, shown below. This grid has two terminal states with
positive payoff (shown in green), a close exit with payoff +1 and a distant exit with payoff +10. The bottom row of
the grid consists of terminal states with negative payoff (shown in red); each state in this "cliff" region has payoff 10. The starting state is the yellow square. We distinguish between two types of paths: (1) paths that "risk the cliff"
and travel near the bottom row of the grid; these paths are shorter but risk earning a large negative payoff, and are
represented by the red arrow in the figure below. (2) paths that "avoid the cliff" and travel along the top edge of the
grid. These paths are longer but are less likely to incur huge negative payoffs. These paths are represented by the
green arrow in the figure below.
DiscountGrid
Give an assignment of parameter values for discount, noise, and livingReward which produce the following optimal
policy types or state that the policy is impossible by returning the string 'NOT POSSIBLE'. The default corresponds
to:
python gridworld.py -a value -i 100 -g DiscountGrid --discount 0.9 --noise 0.2 --livingReward 0.0

a.
b.
c.
d.
e.

Prefer the close exit (+1), risking the cliff (-10)
Prefer the close exit (+1), but avoiding the cliff (-10)
Prefer the distant exit (+10), risking the cliff (-10)
Prefer the distant exit (+10), avoiding the cliff (-10)
Avoid both exits (also avoiding the cliff)

question3a()
analysis.py.

through question3e() should each return a 3-item tuple of (discount, noise, living reward) in

Note: You can check your policies in the GUI. For example, using a correct answer to 3(a), the arrow in (0,1) should
point east, the arrow in (1,1) should also point east, and the arrow in (2,1) should point north.

Q-learning
Note that your value iteration agent does not actually learn from experience. Rather, it ponders its MDP model to
arrive at a complete policy before ever interacting with a real environment. When it does interact with the
environment, it simply follows the precomputed policy (e.g. it becomes a reflex agent). This distinction may be
subtle in a simulated environment like a Gridword, but it's very important in the real world, where the real MDP is
not available.
Question 4 (5 points) You will now write a q-learning agent, which does very little on construction, but instead

learns by trial and error from interactions with the environment through its update(state, action, nextState,
reward) method. A stub of a q-learner is specified in QLearningAgent in qlearningAgents.py, and you can select
it with the option '-a q' . For this question, you must implement the update, getValue, getQValue, and getPolicy
methods.
Note: For getValue and getPolicy, you should break ties randomly for better behavior. The random.choice()
function will help. In a particular state, actions that your agent hasn't seen before still have a Q-value, specifically a
Q-value of zero, and if all of the actions that your agent has seen before have a negative Q-value, an unseen action
may be optimal.
Important: Make sure that you only access Q values by calling getQValue in your getValue, getPolicy functions.
This abstraction will be useful for question 9 when you override getQValue to use features of state-action pairs
rather than state-action pairs directly.
With the q-learning update in place, you can watch your q-learner learn under manual control, using the keyboard:
python gridworld.py -a q -k 5 -m

Recall that -k will control the number of episodes your agent gets to learn. Watch how the agent learns about the
state it was just in, not the one it moves to, and "leaves learning in its wake."
Question 5 (2 points) Complete your q-learning agent by implementing epsilon-greedy action selection in
getAction, meaning it chooses random actions epsilon of the time, and follows its current best q-values otherwise.
python gridworld.py -a q -k 100

Your final q-values should resemble those of your value iteration agent, especially along well-traveled paths.
However, your average returns will be lower than the q-values predict because of the random actions and the initial
learning phase.
You can choose an element from a list uniformly at random by calling the random.choice function. You can
simulate a binary variable with probability p of success by using util.flipCoin(p), which returns True with
probability p and False with probability 1-p .
Question 6 (1 points) First, train a completely random q-learner with the default learning rate on the noiseless
BridgeGrid for 50 episodes and observe whether it finds the optimal policy.
python gridworld.py -a q -k 50 -n 0 -g BridgeGrid -e 1

Now try the same experiment with an epsilon of 0. Is there an epsilon and a learning rate for which it is highly likely
(greater than 99%) that the optimal policy will be learned after 50 iterations? question6() should return EITHER a
2-item tuple of (epsilon, learning rate) OR the string 'NOT POSSIBLE' if there is none. Epsilon is controlled
by -e, learning rate by -l.
Question 7 (1 point) With no additional code, you should now be able to run a q-learning crawler robot:
python crawler.py

If this doesn't work, you've probably written some code too specific to the GridWorld problem and you should make
it more general to all MDPs. You will receive full credit if the command above works without exceptions.
This will invoke the crawling robot from class using your q-learner. Play around with the various learning
parameters to see how they affect the agent's policies and actions. Note that the step delay is a parameter of the
simulation, whereas the learning rate and epsilon are parameters of your learning algorithm, and the discount factor
is a property of the environment.

Approximate Q-learning and State Abstraction
Question 8 (1 points) Time to play some Pac-Man! Pac-Man will play games in two phases. In the first phase,
training, Pac-Man will begin to learn about the values of positions and actions. Because it takes a very long time to
learn accurate q-values even for tiny grids, Pac-Man's training games run in quiet mode by default, with no GUI (or
console) display. Once Pac-Man's training is complete, he will enter testing mode. When testing, Pac-Man's

and self.alpha will be set to 0.0, effectively stopping q-learning and disabling exploration, in order
to allow Pac-Man to exploit his learned policy. Test games are shown in the GUI by default. Without any code
changes you should be able to run q-learning Pac-Man for very tiny grids as follows:
self.epsilon

python pacman.py -p PacmanQAgent -x 2000 -n 2010 -l smallGrid

Note that PacmanQAgent is already defined for you in terms of the QLearningAgent you've already written.
PacmanQAgent is only different in that it has default learning parameters that are more effective for the Pac-Man
problem (epsilon=0.05, alpha=0.2, gamma=0.8). You will receive full credit for this question if the command
above works without exceptions and your agent wins at least 80% of the last 10 runs.
Hint: If your QLearningAgent works for gridworld.py and crawler.py but does not seem to be learning a good
policy for Pac-Man on smallGrid, it may be because your getAction and/or getPolicy methods do not in some
cases properly consider unseen actions. In particular, because unseen actions have by definition a Q-value of zero, if
all of the actions that have been seen have negative Q-values, an unseen action may be optimal.
Note: If you want to experiment with learning parameters, you can use the option -a, for example a epsilon=0.1,alpha=0.3,gamma=0.7. These values will then be accessible as self.epsilon, self.gamma and
self.alpha inside the agent.
Note: While a total of 2010 games will be played, the first 2000 games will not be displayed because of the option x 2000, which designates the first 2000 games for training (no output). Thus, you will only see Pac-Man play the
last 10 of these games. The number of training games is also passed to your agent as the option numTraining.
Note: If you want to watch 10 training games to see what's going on, use the command:
python pacman.py -p PacmanQAgent -n 10 -l smallGrid -a numTraining=10

During training, you will see output every 100 games with statistics about how Pac-Man is faring. Epsilon is
positive during training, so Pac-Man will play poorly even after having learned a good policy: this is because he
occasionally makes a random exploratory move into a ghost. As a benchmark, it should take about 1,000 games
before Pac-Man's rewards for a 100 episode segment becomes positive, reflecting that he's started winning more
than losing. By the end of training, it should remain positive and be fairly high (between 100 and 350).
Make sure you understand what is happening here: the MDP state is the exact board configuration facing Pac-Man,
with the now complex transitions describing an entire ply of change to that state. The intermediate game
configurations in which Pac-Man has moved but the ghosts have not replied are not MDP states, but are bundled in
to the transitions.
Once Pac-Man is done training, he should win very reliably in test games (at least 90% of the time), since now he is
exploiting his learned policy.
However, you'll find that training the same agent on the seemingly simple mediumGrid may not work well. In our
implementation, Pac-Man's average training rewards remain negative throughout training. At test time, he plays
badly, probably losing all of his test games. Training will also take a long time, despite its ineffectiveness.
Pac-Man fails to win on larger layouts because each board configuration is a separate state with separate q-values.
He has no way to generalize that running into a ghost is bad for all positions. Obviously, this approach will not
scale.
Question 9 (3 points) Implement an approximate q-learning agent that learns weights for features of states, where
many states might share the same features. Write your implementation in ApproximateQAgent class in
qlearningAgents.py, which is a subclass of PacmanQAgent .
Note: Approximate q-learning assumes the existence of a feature function f(s,a) over state and action pairs, which
yields a vector f 1 (s,a) .. fi(s,a) .. fn (s,a) of feature values. We provide feature functions for you in
featureExtractors.py. Feature vectors are util.Counter (like a dictionary) objects containing the non-zero pairs
of features and values; all omitted features have value zero.

The approximate q-function takes the following form

where each weight wi is associated with a particular feature fi(s,a). In your code, you should implement the weight
vector as a dictionary mapping features (which the feature extractors will return) to weight values. You will update
your weight vectors similarly to how you updated q-values:

Note that the correction term is the same as in normal Q-Learning.
By default, ApproximateQAgent uses the IdentityExtractor , which assigns a single feature to every
(state,action) pair. With this feature extractor, your approximate q-learning agent should work identically to
PacmanQAgent . You can test this with the following command:
python pacman.py -p ApproximateQAgent -x 2000 -n 2010 -l smallGrid

Important: ApproximateQAgent is a subclass of QLearningAgent, and it therefore shares several methods like
getAction. Make sure that your methods in QLearningAgent call getQValue instead of accessing q-values directly,
so that when you override getQValue in your approximate agent, the new approximate q-values are used to compute
actions.
Once you're confident that your approximate learner works correctly with the identity features, run your approximate
q-learning agent with our custom feature extractor, which can learn to win with ease:
python pacman.py -p ApproximateQAgent -a extractor=SimpleExtractor -x 50 -n 60 -l mediumGrid

Even much larger layouts should be no problem for your ApproximateQAgent . (warning: this may take a few
minutes to train)
python pacman.py -p ApproximateQAgent -a extractor=SimpleExtractor -x 50 -n 60 -l mediumClassic

If you have no errors, your approximate q-learning agent should win almost every time with these simple features,
even with only 50 training games.
Congratulations! You have a learning Pac-Man agent!



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