/NoiseInjection

Fork of DART: Noise Injection for Imitation Learning

Primary LanguagePython

Dart is a fork of Noise Injection for Imitation Learning published here:

https://github.com/BerkeleyAutomation/DART

This repository has been tested with Python 3.5.4, Tensorflow 1.5.0 and Mujoco 1.50.1.41.

Installation and requirements

  1. Install MuJoCo Pro 1.50 from the download page on the MuJoCo website.

  2. Install a license key for MuJoCo, required by dart at runtime. By default, dart and gym look for the MuJoCo license key file at ~/.mujoco/mjkey.txt.

  3. Install mujoco-py

        git clone https://github.com/openai/mujoco-py.git
        cd mujoco-py
        python setup.py install --user
  4. Install Dart

        cd ..
        git clone https://github.com/pedronahum/NoiseInjection.git
        cd NoiseInjection
        python setup.py install --user
  5. Run all the tests (wait a couple of hours)

       sh test.sh 
  6. Plot all the results

       sh plot.sh 

Original Readme.md from BerkeleyAutomation repository:

DART: Noise Injection for Imitation Learning

The code is based on work by Michael Laskey, Jonathan Lee, Roy Fox, Anca Dragan, and Ken Goldberg.

The purpose of this repository is to make available the simulation experiments used in the paper DART: Noise Injection for Robust Imitation Learning and to provide examples of how noise injection may be used to improve off-policy imitation learning by mitigating covariate shift.

Requirements

Clone this repo:

git clone https://github.com/BerkeleyAutomation/DART.git 
cd noise-injection

Create a virtual environment (optional):

virtualenv env
source env/bin/activate

While in the VE, install the required packages:

pip install --upgrade pip
pip install numpy scipy matplotlib pandas sklearn
pip install keras==2.0.4
pip install --upgrade tfBinaryURL 

Replace tfBinaryURL with the appropriate url for your system for Tensorflow version 1.1.0 (e.g. https://storage.googleapis.com/tensorflow/mac/cpu/tensorflow-1.1.0-py2-none-any.whl). Note that other versions may work as well, but they have not been tested.

Clone and install gym and mujoco-py:

git clone https://github.com/openai/gym.git
cd gym
pip install -e .
pip install mujoco-py==0.5.7

Download mjpro131. Follow the instructions from mujoco-py for where to unzip and where to place the license key. Again, other versions of Mujoco may work, but they have not been tested on this project.

Reproducing the Experiments

The results from the paper with the exact same parameters can be reproduced by running the following shell scripts

sh test.sh
sh plot.sh

The test.sh script will run all four domains (Hopper, Walker, HalfCheeth, and Humanoid) for several trials using each algorithm used in the paper and in the supplementary material. Note that this may take hours to complete. Once finished, the data collected can be found in the results/ directory. Subdirectories will be named after the parameters used.

By running plot.sh, reward and loss plots for each environment will be generated as in Fig. 2 and Fig. 4. Loss plots for the random covariance matrices with hand-chosen traces will also be generated as in Fig. 5 of the paper. For the loss plots, loss on the robot's distribution is shown with solid lines and error bars. Loss on the supervisor's distribution is shown with dashed lines.

The simulated error, i.e., the error simulated by a noisy supervisor, may also be plotted in a similar fashion. Although this data is collected from each test, the curves are left out by default so as not to clutter the plots.

For plot_reward.py, an optional --normalize flag may be added to normalize the reward between 0 and 1 as in the paper.

Explanations of Experiments and Parameters

The general methods used for initializing the tasks, collecting the data and evaluating the learners can be found in framework.py. The number of trials to run each experiment may be specified in framework.py.

Each test file (test_bc.py, test_dart.py, etc.) runs a different learning algorithm which takes a series of arguments. test_bc.py runs behavior cloning without any noise as a baseline. test_dagger runs the DAgger algorithm (Ross et al.). test_dagger_b.py runs DAgger-B, which is variant of DAgger where the policy is only updated on select iterations to reduce the computational burden. test_iso.py runs behavior cloning with a noisy supervisor with a isotropic covariance matrix. test_rand.py runs behavior cloning with a Gaussian-noisy supervisor where the covariance matrix is sampled from an inverse Wishart distribution and scaled to a predetermined trace. test_dart.py runs the DART iterative noise optimization algorithm.

Each experiment requires a series of arguments. Arguments common to all tests are given below:

  • --envname [string] Name for the OpenAI gym environment e.g. Hopper-v1
  • --t [integer] Number of times steps per trajectory
  • --iters [space-separated integers] Iterations to evaluate the learned policy

The following are arguments specific to each algorithm:

DART Arguments

  • --update [space-separated integers] Iterations to update the noise parameter.

Random Noise Arguments

  • --prior [float] Error to simulate, i.e., trace of covariance matrix of Gaussian-noisy supervisor.

DAgger Arguments

  • --beta [float] Decaying probability of taking the supervisor's action during training (see Ross et al.).

DAgger-B Arguments

  • --update [space-separated integers] Iterations to update the policy
  • --beta [float] Decaying probability of taking the supervisor's action during training.

Isotropic Noise Arguments

  • --scale [float] Amount to scale identity matrix

As mentioned before, the data collected from running any of these experiments will be stored in the results/ directory under subdirectories named after the provided arguments. The data are stored as CSV files which may be extracted and plotted using pandas and matplotlib or inspected directly using any spreadsheet application. See examples of plotting code in experiments/plot_reward.py