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Improving Sample Complexity Bounds for (Natural) Actor-Critic Algorithms

The actor-critic (AC) algorithm is a popular method to find an optimal policy in reinforcement learning. In the infinite horizon scenario, the finite-sample convergence rate for the AC and natural actor-critic (NAC) algorithms has been established recently, but under independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.) sampling and single-sample update at each iteration. In contrast, this paper characterizes the convergence rate and sample complexity of AC and NAC under Markovian sampling, with mini-batch data for each iteration, and with actor having general policy class approximation. We show that the overall sample complexity for a mini-batch AC to attain an $ε$-accurate stationary point improves the best known sample complexity of AC by an order of $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-1}\log(1/ε))$, and the overall sample complexity for a mini-batch NAC to attain an $ε$-accurate globally optimal point improves the existing sample complexity of NAC by an order of $\mathcal{O}(ε^{-1}/\log(1/ε))$. Moreover, the sample complexity of AC and NAC characterized in this work outperforms that of policy gradient (PG) and natural policy gradient (NPG) by a factor of $\mathcal{O}((1-γ)^{-3})$ and $\mathcal{O}((1-γ)^{-4}ε^{-1}/\log(1/ε))$, respectively. This is the first theoretical study establishing that AC and NAC attain orderwise performance improvement over PG and NPG under infinite horizon due to the incorporation of critic.

preprint2021arXivOpen access
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