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This dissertation focuses on reinforcement learning (RL) controller design aiming for real-life applications in continuous state and control problems. It involves three major research investigations in the aspect of design, analysis, implementation, and evaluation. The application case addresses automatically configuring robotic prosthesis impedance parameters. Major contributions of the dissertation include

This dissertation focuses on reinforcement learning (RL) controller design aiming for real-life applications in continuous state and control problems. It involves three major research investigations in the aspect of design, analysis, implementation, and evaluation. The application case addresses automatically configuring robotic prosthesis impedance parameters. Major contributions of the dissertation include the following. 1) An “echo control” using the intact knee profile as target is designed to overcome the limitation of a designer prescribed robotic knee profile. 2) Collaborative multiagent reinforcement learning (cMARL) is proposed to directly take into account human influence in the robot control design. 3) A phased actor in actor-critic (PAAC) reinforcement learning method is developed to reduce learning variance in RL. The design of an “echo control” is based on a new formulation of direct heuristic dynamic programming (dHDP) for tracking control of a robotic knee prosthesis to mimic the intact knee profile. A systematic simulation of the proposed control is provided using a human-robot system simulation in OpenSim. The tracking controller is then tested on able-bodied and amputee subjects. This is the first real-time human testing of RL tracking control of a robotic knee to mirror the profile of an intact knee. The cMARL is a new solution framework for the human-prosthesis collaboration (HPC) problem. This is the first attempt at considering human influence on human-robot walking with the presence of a reinforcement learning controlled lower limb prosthesis. Results show that treating the human and robot as coupled and collaborating agents and using an estimated human adaptation in robot control design help improve human walking performance. The above studies have demonstrated great potential of RL control in solving continuous problems. To solve more complex real-life tasks with multiple control inputs and high dimensional state space, high variance, low data efficiency, slow learning or even instability are major roadblocks to be addressed. A novel PAAC method is proposed to improve learning performance in policy gradient RL by accounting for both Q value and TD error in actor updates. Systematical and comprehensive demonstrations show its effectiveness by qualitative analysis and quantitative evaluation in DeepMind Control Suite.
ContributorsWu, Ruofan (Author) / Si, Jennie (Thesis advisor) / Huang, He (Committee member) / Santello, Marco (Committee member) / Papandreou- Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Robotic lower limb prostheses provide new opportunities to help transfemoral amputees regain mobility. However, their application is impeded by that the impedance control parameters need to be tuned and optimized manually by prosthetists for each individual user in different task environments. Reinforcement learning (RL) is capable of automatically learning from

Robotic lower limb prostheses provide new opportunities to help transfemoral amputees regain mobility. However, their application is impeded by that the impedance control parameters need to be tuned and optimized manually by prosthetists for each individual user in different task environments. Reinforcement learning (RL) is capable of automatically learning from interacting with the environment. It becomes a natural candidate to replace human prosthetists to customize the control parameters. However, neither traditional RL approaches nor the popular deep RL approaches are readily suitable for learning with limited number of samples and samples with large variations. This dissertation aims to explore new RL based adaptive solutions that are data-efficient for controlling robotic prostheses.

This dissertation begins by proposing a new flexible policy iteration (FPI) framework. To improve sample efficiency, FPI can utilize either on-policy or off-policy learning strategy, can learn from either online or offline data, and can even adopt exiting knowledge of an external critic. Approximate convergence to Bellman optimal solutions are guaranteed under mild conditions. Simulation studies validated that FPI was data efficient compared to several established RL methods. Furthermore, a simplified version of FPI was implemented to learn from offline data, and then the learned policy was successfully tested for tuning the control parameters online on a human subject.

Next, the dissertation discusses RL control with information transfer (RL-IT), or knowledge-guided RL (KG-RL), which is motivated to benefit from transferring knowledge acquired from one subject to another. To explore its feasibility, knowledge was extracted from data measurements of able-bodied (AB) subjects, and transferred to guide Q-learning control for an amputee in OpenSim simulations. This result again demonstrated that data and time efficiency were improved using previous knowledge.

While the present study is new and promising, there are still many open questions to be addressed in future research. To account for human adaption, the learning control objective function may be designed to incorporate human-prosthesis performance feedback such as symmetry, user comfort level and satisfaction, and user energy consumption. To make the RL based control parameter tuning practical in real life, it should be further developed and tested in different use environments, such as from level ground walking to stair ascending or descending, and from walking to running.
ContributorsGao, Xiang (Author) / Si, Jennie (Thesis advisor) / Huang, He Helen (Committee member) / Santello, Marco (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020