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Matni, N.; Morari, M; Pappas, G. (Ed.)We study the problem of learning a linear system model from the observations of M clients. The catch: Each client is observing data from a different dynamical system. This work addresses the question of how multiple clients collaboratively learn dynamical models in the presence of heterogeneity. We pose this problem as a federated learning problem and characterize the tension between achievable performance and system heterogeneity. Furthermore, our federated sample complexity result provides a constant factor improvement over the single agent setting. Finally, we describe a meta federated learning algorithm, FedSysID, that leverages existing federated algorithms at the client level.more » « less
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Matni, N.; Morari, M.; Pappas, G. J. (Ed.)We address the problem of learning the legitimacy of other agents in a multiagent network when an unknown subset is comprised of malicious actors. We specifically derive results for the case of directed graphs and where stochastic side information, or observations of trust, is available. We refer to this as “learning trust” since agents must identify which neighbors in the network are reliable, and we derive a learning protocol to achieve this. We also provide analytical results showing that under this protocol i) agents can learn the legitimacy of all other agents almost surely, and ii) the opinions of the agents converge in mean to the true legitimacy of all other agents in the network. Lastly, we provide numerical studies showing that our convergence results hold for various network topologies and variations in the number of malicious agents.more » « less
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Matni, N; Morari, M; Pappas, G J (Ed.)In this paper, we propose a robust reinforcement learning method for a class of linear discrete-time systems to handle model mismatches that may be induced by sim-to-real gap. Under the formulation of risk-sensitive linear quadratic Gaussian control, a dual-loop policy optimization algorithm is proposed to iteratively approximate the robust and optimal controller. The convergence and robustness of the dual-loop policy optimization algorithm are rigorously analyzed. It is shown that the dual-loop policy optimization algorithm uniformly converges to the optimal solution. In addition, by invoking the concept of small-disturbance input-to-state stability, it is guaranteed that the dual-loop policy optimization algorithm still converges to a neighborhood of the optimal solution when the algorithm is subject to a sufficiently small disturbance at each step. When the system matrices are unknown, a learning-based off-policy policy optimization algorithm is proposed for the same class of linear systems with additive Gaussian noise. The numerical simulation is implemented to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed algorithm.more » « less
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Matni, N; Morari, M; Pappas, G.J. (Ed.)One of the long-term objectives of Machine Learning is to endow machines with the capacity of structuring and interpreting the world as we do. This is particularly challenging in scenes involving time series, such as video sequences, since seemingly different data can correspond to the same underlying dynamics. Recent approaches seek to decompose video sequences into their composing objects, attributes and dynamics in a self-supervised fashion, thus simplifying the task of learning suitable features that can be used to analyze each component. While existing methods can successfully disentangle dynamics from other components, there have been relatively few efforts in learning parsimonious representations of these underlying dynamics. In this paper, motivated by recent advances in non-linear identification, we propose a method to decompose a video into moving objects, their attributes and the dynamic modes of their trajectories. We model video dynamics as the output of a Koopman operator to be learned from the available data. In this context, the dynamic information contained in the scene is encapsulated in the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the Koopman operator, providing an interpretable and parsimonious representation. We show that such decomposition can be used for instance to perform video analytics, predict future frames or generate synthetic video. We test our framework in a variety of datasets that encompass different dynamic scenarios, while illustrating the novel features that emerge from our dynamic modes decomposition: Video dynamics interpretation and user manipulation at test-time. We successfully forecast challenging object trajectories from pixels, achieving competitive performance while drawing useful insights.more » « less
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