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Reward Bases: Instantaneous reward revaluation with temporal difference learning

Beren Millidge, Mark Walton, Rafal Bogacz
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.04.14.488361
Beren Millidge
1MRC Brain Networks Dynamics Unit, University of Oxford
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Mark Walton
2Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford
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Rafal Bogacz
1MRC Brain Networks Dynamics Unit, University of Oxford
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Abstract

An influential theory posits that dopaminergic neurons in the mid-brain implement a model-free reinforcement learning algorithm based on temporal difference (TD) learning. A fundamental assumption of this model is that the reward function being optimized is fixed. However, for biological creatures the ‘reward function’ can fluctuate substantially over time depending on the internal physiological state of the animal. For instance, food is rewarding when you are hungry, but not when you are satiated. While a variety of experiments have demonstrated that animals can instantly adapt their behaviour when their internal physiological state changes, under current thinking this requires model-based planning since the standard model of TD learning requires retraining from scratch if the reward function changes. Here, we propose a novel and simple extension to TD learning that allows for the zero-shot (instantaneous) generalization to changing reward functions. Mathematically, we show that if we assume the reward function is a linear combination of reward basis vectors, and if we learn a value function for each reward basis using TD learning, then we can recover the true value function by a linear combination of these value function bases. This representational scheme allows instant and perfect generalization to any reward function in the span of the reward basis vectors as well as possesses a straightforward implementation in neural circuitry by parallelizing the standard circuitry required for TD learning. We demonstrate that our algorithm can also reproduce behavioural data on reward revaluation tasks, predict dopamine responses in the nucleus accumbens, as well as learn equally fast as successor representations while requiring much less memory.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.
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Posted April 14, 2022.
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Reward Bases: Instantaneous reward revaluation with temporal difference learning
Beren Millidge, Mark Walton, Rafal Bogacz
bioRxiv 2022.04.14.488361; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.04.14.488361
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Reward Bases: Instantaneous reward revaluation with temporal difference learning
Beren Millidge, Mark Walton, Rafal Bogacz
bioRxiv 2022.04.14.488361; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.04.14.488361

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