On the Convergence of Model Free Learning in Mean Field Games

Authors

  • Romuald Elie Université Paris-Est
  • Julien Pérolat Deepmind
  • Mathieu Laurière Princeton University
  • Matthieu Geist Google Research, Brain Team
  • Olivier Pietquin Google Research, Brain Team

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i05.6203

Abstract

Learning by experience in Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) is a difficult and exciting task, due to the lack of stationarity of the environment, whose dynamics evolves as the population learns. In order to design scalable algorithms for systems with a large population of interacting agents (e.g., swarms), this paper focuses on Mean Field MAS, where the number of agents is asymptotically infinite. Recently, a very active burgeoning field studies the effects of diverse reinforcement learning algorithms for agents with no prior information on a stationary Mean Field Game (MFG) and learn their policy through repeated experience. We adopt a high perspective on this problem and analyze in full generality the convergence of a fictitious iterative scheme using any single agent learning algorithm at each step. We quantify the quality of the computed approximate Nash equilibrium, in terms of the accumulated errors arising at each learning iteration step. Notably, we show for the first time convergence of model free learning algorithms towards non-stationary MFG equilibria, relying only on classical assumptions on the MFG dynamics. We illustrate our theoretical results with a numerical experiment in a continuous action-space environment, where the approximate best response of the iterative fictitious play scheme is computed with a deep RL algorithm.

Downloads

Published

2020-04-03

How to Cite

Elie, R., Pérolat, J., Laurière, M., Geist, M., & Pietquin, O. (2020). On the Convergence of Model Free Learning in Mean Field Games. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 34(05), 7143-7150. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i05.6203

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track: Multiagent Systems