Intermediate · Reinforcement Learning
Environment grounding
Visual diagram · (in preparation) · Math · (in preparation) · Worked example · 3 difficulty levels.
TL;DR. The feedback and contextual data an agent receives from its environment after taking an action.
Technical Definition
The feedback and contextual data an agent receives from its environment after taking an action.
How it works
Environment grounding refers to the information an agent receives back from its environment that helps it understand the consequences of its actions. This feedback can include changes in the environment's state, rewards, or other relevant data like error logs or sensory input. It allows the agent to update its understanding and decision-making policies.
Related Concepts
- Reinforcement Learning — A paradigm where an agent learns to make decisions by receiving rewards or penalties from its environment through trial and error.
- AI Agent — An AI system that autonomously plans, uses tools, and takes actions to accomplish goals through iterative reasoning.
- Feedback loop — A feedback loop occurs when a model's output influences its future input or training data, potentially leading to system drift or reinforcement of biases.