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GECCO
2009
Springer

Novelty of behaviour as a basis for the neuro-evolution of operant reward learning

14 years 5 months ago
Novelty of behaviour as a basis for the neuro-evolution of operant reward learning
An agent that deviates from a usual or previous course of action can be said to display novel or varying behaviour. Novelty of behaviour can be seen as the result of real or apparent randomness in decision making, which prevents an agent from repeating exactly past choices. In this paper, novelty of behaviour is considered as an evolutionary precursor of the exploring skill in reward learning, and conservative behaviour as the precursor of exploitation. Novelty of behaviour in neural control is hypothesised to be an important factor in the neuro-evolution of operant reward learning. Agents capable of varying behaviour, as opposed to conservative, when exposed to reward stimuli appear to acquire on a faster evolutionary scale the meaning and use of such reward information. The hypothesis is validated by comparing the performance during evolution in two environments that either favour or are neutral to novelty. Following these findings, we suggest that neuro-evolution of operant reward...
Andrea Soltoggio, Ben Jones
Added 24 Jul 2010
Updated 24 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where GECCO
Authors Andrea Soltoggio, Ben Jones
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