Differential Dynamic Programming (DDP) is an Optimal Control algorithm of the trajectory optimization class. The algorithm was was introduced in 1966 by Mayne[1] and subsequently analysed in Jacobson and Mayne's eponymous book[2]. The algorithm uses locally-quadratic models of the dynamics and cost functions, and displays quadratic convergence. It is closely related to Pantoja's step-wise Newton's method[3][4].
describe the evolution of the state given the control . The total cost is the sum of running costs and final cost , incurred when starting from state and applying the control sequence until the horizon is reached:
where , and the for are given by Eq. 1. The solution of the optimal control problem is the minimizing control sequence
Trajectory optimization means finding for a particular , rather than for all possible initial states.
Dynamic Programming
Let be the partial control sequence and define the cost-to-go as the partial sum of costs from to :
The optimal cost-to-go or Value Function at time is the cost-to-go given the minimizing control sequence:
Setting , the Dynamic Programming Principle reduces the minimization over an entire sequence of controls to a sequence of minimizations over a single control, proceeding backwards in time:
DDP proceeds by iteratively performing a backward pass on the nominal trajectory to generate a new control sequence, and then a forward-pass to compute and evaluate a new nominal trajectory. We begin with the backward pass. If
is the argument of the operator in Eq. 2, let be the variation of this quantity around the -th pair:
and expand to second order
3
The notation used here is a variant of the notation of Morimoto[5]. Dropping the index for readability, primes denoting the next time-step , the expansion coefficients are
The last terms in the last 3 equations denote contraction of a vector with a tensor. Minimizing the quadratic approximation with respect to we have
4
giving us an open-loop term and a feedback gain term . Plugging the result back into (3), we now have a quadratic model of the Value at time :
Recursively computing the local quadratic models of and the control modifications , from down to , constitutes the backward pass. As above, the Value is initialized with . Once the backward pass is completed, a forward pass computes a new trajectory:
The backward passes and forward passes are iterated until convergence.
Regularization and Line-Search
Differential Dynamic Programming is a second-order algorithm like Newton's Method. It therefore takes large steps toward the minimum and often requires regularization and/or line-search to achieve convergence
[6][7]
.Regularization in the DDP context means ensuring that the matrix in Eq. 4 is positive definite. Line-search in DDP amounts to scaling the open-loop control modification by some .
References
^Mayne, D. Q. (1966). "A second-order gradient method of optimizing non-linear discrete time systems". Int J Control. 3: 85–95.
^de O. Pantoja, J. F. A. (1988). "Differential dynamic programming and Newton's method". International Journal of Control. 47 (5): 1539–1553. doi:10.1080/00207178808906114. ISSN0020-7179.
^Liao, L. Z. (1992). "Advantages of differential dynamic programming over Newton's method for discrete-time optimal control problems". Cornell University, Ithaca, NY. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
^Morimoto, J. (2003). "Minimax differential dynamic programming: Application to a biped walking robot". Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2003.(IROS 2003). Proceedings. 2003 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on. Vol. 2. pp. 1927–1932. {{cite conference}}: Unknown parameter |booktitle= ignored (|book-title= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
^
Liao, L. Z (1991). "Convergence in unconstrained discrete-time differential dynamic programming". IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control. 36 (6): 692. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
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