Reader small image

You're reading from  Deep Reinforcement Learning Hands-On. - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inJan 2020
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781838826994
Edition2nd Edition
Languages
Right arrow
Author (1)
Maxim Lapan
Maxim Lapan
author image
Maxim Lapan

Maxim has been working as a software developer for more than 20 years and was involved in various areas: distributed scientific computing, distributed systems and big data processing. Since 2014 he is actively using machine and deep learning to solve practical industrial tasks, such as NLP problems, RL for web crawling and web pages analysis. He has been living in Germany with his family.
Read more about Maxim Lapan

Right arrow

Real-life value iteration

The improvements that we got in the FrozenLake environment by switching from the cross-entropy method to the value iteration method are quite encouraging, so it's tempting to apply the value iteration method to more challenging problems. However, let's first look at the assumptions and limitations that our value iteration method has.

We will start with a quick recap of the method. On every step, the value iteration method does a loop on all states, and for every state, it performs an update of its value with a Bellman approximation. The variation of the same method for Q-values (values for actions) is almost the same, but we approximate and store values for every state and action. So, what's wrong with this process?

The first obvious problem is the count of environment states and our ability to iterate over them. In value iteration, we assume that we know all states in our environment in advance, can iterate over them, and can store value...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Deep Reinforcement Learning Hands-On. - Second Edition
Published in: Jan 2020Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781838826994

Author (1)

author image
Maxim Lapan

Maxim has been working as a software developer for more than 20 years and was involved in various areas: distributed scientific computing, distributed systems and big data processing. Since 2014 he is actively using machine and deep learning to solve practical industrial tasks, such as NLP problems, RL for web crawling and web pages analysis. He has been living in Germany with his family.
Read more about Maxim Lapan