Learning Interpretable, High-Performing Policies for Autonomous Driving


Rohan R Paleja (Georgia Institute of Technology),
Yaru Niu (Georgia Institute of Technology),
Andrew Silva (Georgia Institute of Technology),
Chace O Ritchie (University of Kentucky),
Sugju Choi (Georgia Institute of Technology),
Matthew Gombolay (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Paper Website
Paper #068
Session 10. Short talks


Abstract

Gradient-based approaches in reinforcement learning (RL) have achieved tremendous success in learning policies for autonomous vehicles. While the performance of these approaches warrants real-world adoption, these policies lack interpretability, limiting deployability in the safety-critical and legally-regulated domain of autonomous driving (AD). AD requires interpretable and verifiable control policies that maintain high performance. We propose Interpretable Continuous Control Trees (ICCTs), a tree-based model that can be optimized via modern, gradient-based, RL approaches to produce high-performing, interpretable policies. The key to our approach is a procedure for allowing direct optimization in a sparse decision-tree-like representation. We validate ICCTs against baselines across six domains, showing that ICCTs are capable of learning interpretable policy representations that parity or outperform baselines by up to 33% in AD scenarios while achieving a 300x-600x reduction in the number of policy parameters against deep learning baselines. Furthermore, we demonstrate the interpretability and utility of our ICCTs through a 14-car physical robot demonstration.

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