Paper 36 Details

Title

Can Social Learning Increase Learning Speed, Performance or Both?

Authors

Jacqueline Heinerman, Jörg Stork, Margarita Alejandra Rebolledo Coy, Julien Hubert, A.E. Eiben, Thomas Bartz-Beielstein, Evert Haasdijk

Schedule

Date: Thursday 7 Sept
Talk Time: TBA
Session: Evolutionary robotics 2 14:00

Keywords

Evolutionary robotics, social learning, neural networks, parameter tuning

Abstract

Social learning enables multiple robots to share learned experiences while completing a task. The literature offers contradicting examples of its benefits; robots trained with social learning reach a higher performance, an increased learning speed, or both, compared to their individual learning counterparts. No general explanation has been advanced for the difference in observations, which make the results highly dependent on the particular system and parameter setting. In this research, we show that even within one system, the observed advantages of social learning can vary between parameter settings.

Using Evolutionary Robotics, we train robots individually in a foraging task. We compare the performance of 50 parameter instances of the evolutionary algorithm obtained by a definitive screening design. We apply social learning in groups of two and four robots to the parameter settings that lead to the best and median performance.

Our results show that the observed advantages of social learning differ highly between parameter settings but in general, median quality parameter settings experience more benefit from social learning.

These results serve as a reminder that tuning of the parameters should not be left as an afterthought because they can drastically impact the conclusions on the advantages of social learning. Additionally, these results suggest that social learning reduces the sensitivity of the learning process to the choice of parameters.

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