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Q-learning×Djup förstärkningsinlärning×Dynamisk programmering×Policy gradient-metoder×
ÄmnesområdeMaskininlärningDjupinlärningOptimeringMaskininlärning
FamiljMachine learningMachine learningProcess / pipelineMachine learning
Ursprungsår1992201519571992
UpphovspersonChristopher Watkins & Peter DayanMnih, V. et al. (DQN)Richard BellmanRonald Williams (REINFORCE); Sutton et al. (policy gradient theorem)
TypModel-free reinforcement-learning control algorithmSequential decision-making (agent–environment interaction)Exact combinatorial optimization via recursive decompositionPolicy-based reinforcement learning
UrsprungskällaWatkins, C. J. C. H., & Dayan, P. (1992). Q-learning. Machine Learning, 8(3–4), 279–292. DOI ↗Mnih, V. et al. (2015). Human-Level Control through Deep Reinforcement Learning. Nature, 518, 529–533. DOI ↗Bellman, R. (1957). Dynamic Programming. Princeton University Press. ISBN: 978-0-691-07951-6Williams, R. J. (1992). Simple statistical gradient-following algorithms for connectionist reinforcement learning. Machine Learning, 8(3–4), 229–256. DOI ↗
AliasQ-learning algorithm, tabular Q-learning, off-policy TD control, Q-öğrenmeDerin Pekiştirmeli Öğrenme (DQN / PPO / A3C), derin pekiştirmeli öğrenme, deep RL, DRLDP, Bellman's Principle of Optimality, Recursive Optimization, Dinamik ProgramlamaREINFORCE, actor-critic, policy optimization, politika gradyanı
Närliggande3434
SammanfattningQ-learning, introduced by Christopher Watkins and Peter Dayan in 1992, is a model-free reinforcement-learning algorithm that learns the value of taking each action in each state — the Q-function — purely from experience, without a model of the environment. It is off-policy: it learns the optimal action-values while following an exploratory behaviour policy, and under standard conditions it provably converges to the optimal policy.Deep Reinforcement Learning combines neural networks with reinforcement learning so an agent learns by interacting with an environment, popularised by Mnih and colleagues' 2015 Nature work on human-level Atari control. Instead of learning from a fixed labelled dataset, the agent takes actions, observes rewards, and gradually shapes a policy that maximises long-run return.Dynamic Programming (DP) is an exact optimization technique introduced by Richard Bellman in 1957 for solving multi-stage decision problems. It decomposes a complex problem into simpler, overlapping subproblems, solves each subproblem once, and stores the results to avoid redundant computation. Grounded in the Principle of Optimality, DP guarantees globally optimal solutions whenever the problem exhibits overlapping subproblems and optimal substructure.Policy gradient methods are reinforcement-learning algorithms that optimize a parameterized policy directly by gradient ascent on the expected return, rather than learning action-values and acting greedily. Founded on Ronald Williams' 1992 REINFORCE algorithm and the policy gradient theorem of Sutton and colleagues (2000), they naturally handle stochastic and continuous action spaces and underpin modern actor-critic and deep-RL algorithms.
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ScholarGateJämför metoder: Q-Learning · Deep Reinforcement Learning · Dynamic Programming · Policy Gradient. Hämtad 2026-06-17 från https://scholargate.app/sv/compare