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The generalization of Voronoi regions is in the form of so-called Cost-Induced Voronoi (CIV) regions, where the agent state space may differ from the space being partitioned. One example of such regions is when the cost is given by the optimal solution of an LQR control problem. Then the agent states include position as well as velocity, while the partitioned space only includes positions.
The agent utility is defined by integrating some utility density over the CIV region of the agent. This utility density might be the probability density of some beneficial event, such as receiving a pass in soccer. The utility is then the overall probability of receiving a pass and the gradient represents a way to improve that probability. We show how this utility gradient can be computed using the Reynolds Transport Theorem from fluid mechanics, and that this approach achieves similar accuracy while reducing computation time by about an order of magnitude compared to a baseline finite-difference approximation.
From: Andre N. Costa [view email]
[v1]
Tue, 16 Jun 2026 00:58:23 UTC (948 KB)
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