Researcher profile

Paul Barde

Paul Barde contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Modelling Customer Trajectories with Reinforcement Learning for Practical Retail Insights

Understanding customer movement within retail spaces is essential for optimizing store layouts. Real-world trajectory data can provide highly accurate insights, but collecting it is costly and often infeasible for many retailers. Heuristics such as Travelling Salesman Problem (TSP) and Probabilistic Nearest Neighbours (PNN) are commonly used as inexpensive approximations, but actual customer trajectories deviate by an average of 28% from shortest paths, highlighting a tradeoff between accuracy and practicality. We propose an agent-based modelling framework that casts customer trajectory prediction as a maximum entropy reinforcement learning (RL) problem, balancing reward maximization with stochasticity to better reflect customers with bounded rationality. Using real-world trajectory data from a convenience store, we show that RL-generated trajectories align more closely with customer behaviour than TSP and PNN, providing more accurate estimates of impulse purchase rates and shelf traffic densities. Furthermore, only RL-based predictions yield repositioning decisions for impulse products that align with those derived from actual trajectory data, resulting in comparable estimated profit gains. Our work demonstrates that RL provides a practical, behaviourally grounded alternative that bridges the gap between oversimplified heuristics and data-intensive approaches, making accurate layout optimization more accessible. To encourage further research, the source code is available on GitHub.

preprint2022arXiv

Learning to Guide and to Be Guided in the Architect-Builder Problem

We are interested in interactive agents that learn to coordinate, namely, a $builder$ -- which performs actions but ignores the goal of the task, i.e. has no access to rewards -- and an $architect$ which guides the builder towards the goal of the task. We define and explore a formal setting where artificial agents are equipped with mechanisms that allow them to simultaneously learn a task while at the same time evolving a shared communication protocol. Ideally, such learning should only rely on high-level communication priors and be able to handle a large variety of tasks and meanings while deriving communication protocols that can be reused across tasks. We present the Architect-Builder Problem (ABP): an asymmetrical setting in which an architect must learn to guide a builder towards constructing a specific structure. The architect knows the target structure but cannot act in the environment and can only send arbitrary messages to the builder. The builder on the other hand can act in the environment, but receives no rewards nor has any knowledge about the task, and must learn to solve it relying only on the messages sent by the architect. Crucially, the meaning of messages is initially not defined nor shared between the agents but must be negotiated throughout learning. Under these constraints, we propose Architect-Builder Iterated Guiding (ABIG), a solution to ABP where the architect leverages a learned model of the builder to guide it while the builder uses self-imitation learning to reinforce its guided behavior. We analyze the key learning mechanisms of ABIG and test it in 2D tasks involving grasping cubes, placing them at a given location, or building various shapes. ABIG results in a low-level, high-frequency, guiding communication protocol that not only enables an architect-builder pair to solve the task at hand, but that can also generalize to unseen tasks.

preprint2020arXiv

Scalable Multi-Agent Inverse Reinforcement Learning via Actor-Attention-Critic

Multi-agent adversarial inverse reinforcement learning (MA-AIRL) is a recent approach that applies single-agent AIRL to multi-agent problems where we seek to recover both policies for our agents and reward functions that promote expert-like behavior. While MA-AIRL has promising results on cooperative and competitive tasks, it is sample-inefficient and has only been validated empirically for small numbers of agents -- its ability to scale to many agents remains an open question. We propose a multi-agent inverse RL algorithm that is more sample-efficient and scalable than previous works. Specifically, we employ multi-agent actor-attention-critic (MAAC) -- an off-policy multi-agent RL (MARL) method -- for the RL inner loop of the inverse RL procedure. In doing so, we are able to increase sample efficiency compared to state-of-the-art baselines, across both small- and large-scale tasks. Moreover, the RL agents trained on the rewards recovered by our method better match the experts than those trained on the rewards derived from the baselines. Finally, our method requires far fewer agent-environment interactions, particularly as the number of agents increases.