Neural networks always have a lot of local optima. Simply because they have a high degree of internal symmetry. That is, you can “permute” sets of coefficients and get the same function.
Don’t think of starting with expert training as a way to avoid local optima. It is a way to start training with some good examples so that learning can start at a higher level. But then you should continue with self-play. Backgammon was trained to expert level based on self-play games that were initially random. Google “Tesauro backgammon” and you should be able to find a paper. I don’t know NEAT and HyperNEAT; I will look them up. Thank you for the reference. Best, Brian From: Computer-go [mailto:computer-go-boun...@computer-go.org] On Behalf Of Minjae Kim Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 3:39 AM To: computer-go@computer-go.org Subject: [Computer-go] dealing with multiple local optima I've recently viewed the paper of AlphaGo, which has done gradient-based reinforcement learning to get stronger. The learning was successful enough to beat a human master, but in this case, supervised learning with a large database of master level human games was preceded the reinforcement learning. For a complex enough game as go, one can expect that the search space for the policy function would not be smooth at all. So supposedly supervised learning was necessary to guide the policy function to a good starting point before reinforcement. Without such, applying reinforcement learning directly to a random policy can easily make the policy stuck at a bad local optimum. I could have a miunderstanding at this point; correct me if so, but to continue on: if it is hard to have "the good starting point" such as a trained policy from human expert game records, what is a way to devise one. I've had a look on NEAT and HyperNEAT, which are evolutionary methods. Do these evolutionary algorithms scale well on complex strategic decision processes and not just on simple linear decisions such as food gathering and danger avoidance? In case not, what alternatives are known? Is there any success case of a chess, go, or any kind of complex strategic game playing algorithm, where it gained expert strength without domain knowledge such as expert game examples?
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