English

From Centralized to Self-Supervised: Pursuing Realistic Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning

Multiagent Systems 2023-12-15 v1

Abstract

In real-world environments, autonomous agents rely on their egocentric observations. They must learn adaptive strategies to interact with others who possess mixed motivations, discernible only through visible cues. Several Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning (MARL) methods adopt centralized approaches that involve either centralized training or reward-sharing, often violating the realistic ways in which living organisms, like animals or humans, process information and interact. MARL strategies deploying decentralized training with intrinsic motivation offer a self-supervised approach, enable agents to develop flexible social strategies through the interaction of autonomous agents. However, by contrasting the self-supervised and centralized methods, we reveal that populations trained with reward-sharing methods surpass those using self-supervised methods in a mixed-motive environment. We link this superiority to specialized role emergence and an agent's expertise in its role. Interestingly, this gap shrinks in pure-motive settings, emphasizing the need for evaluations in more complex, realistic environments (mixed-motive). Our preliminary results suggest a gap in population performance that can be closed by improving self-supervised methods and thereby pushing MARL closer to real-world readiness.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2312.08662,
  title  = {From Centralized to Self-Supervised: Pursuing Realistic Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning},
  author = {Violet Xiang and Logan Cross and Jan-Philipp Fränken and Nick Haber},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.08662},
  year   = {2023}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T13:50:30.140Z