I'm working on implementing prioritized experience replay for a deep-q network, and part of the specification is to multiply gradients by what's know as importance sampling (IS) weights. The gradient modification is discussed in section 3.4 of the following paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1511.05952.pdf I'm struggling with creating a custom loss function that takes in an array of IS weights in addition to y_true
and y_pred
.
Here's a simplified version of my model:
import numpy as np
import tensorflow as tf
# Input is RAM, each byte in the range of [0, 255].
in_obs = tf.keras.layers.Input(shape=(4,))
# Normalize the observation to the range of [0, 1].
norm = tf.keras.layers.Lambda(lambda x: x / 255.0)(in_obs)
# Hidden layers.
dense1 = tf.keras.layers.Dense(128, activation="relu")(norm)
dense2 = tf.keras.layers.Dense(128, activation="relu")(dense1)
dense3 = tf.keras.layers.Dense(128, activation="relu")(dense2)
dense4 = tf.keras.layers.Dense(128, activation="relu")(dense3)
# Output prediction, which is an action to take.
out_pred = tf.keras.layers.Dense(2, activation="linear")(dense4)
opt = tf.keras.optimizers.Adam(lr=5e-5)
network = tf.keras.models.Model(inputs=in_obs, outputs=out_pred)
network.compile(optimizer=opt, loss=huber_loss_mean_weighted)
Here's my custom loss function, which is just an implementation of Huber Loss multiplied by the IS weights:
'''
' Huber loss: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huber_loss
'''
def huber_loss(y_true, y_pred):
error = y_true - y_pred
cond = tf.keras.backend.abs(error) < 1.0
squared_loss = 0.5 * tf.keras.backend.square(error)
linear_loss = tf.keras.backend.abs(error) - 0.5
return tf.where(cond, squared_loss, linear_loss)
'''
' Importance Sampling weighted huber loss.
'''
def huber_loss_mean_weighted(y_true, y_pred, is_weights):
error = huber_loss(y_true, y_pred)
return tf.keras.backend.mean(error * is_weights)
The important bit is that is_weights
is dynamic, i.e. it's different each time fit()
is called. As such, I cannot simply close over is_weights
as described here: Make a custom loss function in keras
I found this code online, which appears to use a Lambda
layer to compute the loss: https://github.com/keras-team/keras/blob/master/examples/image_ocr.py#L475 It looks promising, but I'm struggling to understand it/adapt it to my particular problem. Any help is appreciated.