Researcher profile

Aaron Havens

Aaron Havens contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Flow Sampling: Learning to Sample from Unnormalized Densities via Denoising Conditional Processes

Sampling from unnormalized densities is analogous to the generative modeling problem, but the target distribution is defined by a known energy function instead of data samples. Because evaluating the energy function is often costly, a primary challenge is to learn an efficient sampler. We introduce Flow Sampling, a framework built on diffusion models and flow matching for the data-free setting. Our training objective is conditioned on a noise sample and regresses onto a denoising diffusion drift constructed from the energy function. In contrast, diffusion models' objective is conditioned on a data sample and regresses onto a noising diffusion drift. We utilize the interpolant process to minimize the number of energy function evaluations during training, resulting in an efficient and scalable method for sampling unnormalized densities. Furthermore, our formulation naturally extends to Riemannian manifolds, enabling diffusion-based sampling in geometries beyond Euclidean space. We derive a closed-form formula for the conditional drift on constant curvature manifolds, including hyperspheres and hyperbolic spaces. We evaluate Flow Sampling on synthetic energy benchmarks, small peptides, large-scale amortized molecular conformer generation, and distributions supported on the sphere, demonstrating strong empirical performance.

preprint2022arXiv

Model-Free $μ$ Synthesis via Adversarial Reinforcement Learning

Motivated by the recent empirical success of policy-based reinforcement learning (RL), there has been a research trend studying the performance of policy-based RL methods on standard control benchmark problems. In this paper, we examine the effectiveness of policy-based RL methods on an important robust control problem, namely $μ$ synthesis. We build a connection between robust adversarial RL and $μ$ synthesis, and develop a model-free version of the well-known $DK$-iteration for solving state-feedback $μ$ synthesis with static $D$-scaling. In the proposed algorithm, the $K$ step mimics the classical central path algorithm via incorporating a recently-developed double-loop adversarial RL method as a subroutine, and the $D$ step is based on model-free finite difference approximation. Extensive numerical study is also presented to demonstrate the utility of our proposed model-free algorithm. Our study sheds new light on the connections between adversarial RL and robust control.

preprint2022arXiv

Revisiting PGD Attacks for Stability Analysis of Large-Scale Nonlinear Systems and Perception-Based Control

Many existing region-of-attraction (ROA) analysis tools find difficulty in addressing feedback systems with large-scale neural network (NN) policies and/or high-dimensional sensing modalities such as cameras. In this paper, we tailor the projected gradient descent (PGD) attack method developed in the adversarial learning community as a general-purpose ROA analysis tool for large-scale nonlinear systems and end-to-end perception-based control. We show that the ROA analysis can be approximated as a constrained maximization problem whose goal is to find the worst-case initial condition which shifts the terminal state the most. Then we present two PGD-based iterative methods which can be used to solve the resultant constrained maximization problem. Our analysis is not based on Lyapunov theory, and hence requires minimum information of the problem structures. In the model-based setting, we show that the PGD updates can be efficiently performed using back-propagation. In the model-free setting (which is more relevant to ROA analysis of perception-based control), we propose a finite-difference PGD estimate which is general and only requires a black-box simulator for generating the trajectories of the closed-loop system given any initial state. We demonstrate the scalability and generality of our analysis tool on several numerical examples with large-scale NN policies and high-dimensional image observations. We believe that our proposed analysis serves as a meaningful initial step toward further understanding of closed-loop stability of large-scale nonlinear systems and perception-based control.