Sequential Experimental Design for Transductive Linear Bandits


الملخص بالإنكليزية

In this paper we introduce the transductive linear bandit problem: given a set of measurement vectors $mathcal{X}subset mathbb{R}^d$, a set of items $mathcal{Z}subset mathbb{R}^d$, a fixed confidence $delta$, and an unknown vector $theta^{ast}in mathbb{R}^d$, the goal is to infer $text{argmax}_{zin mathcal{Z}} z^toptheta^ast$ with probability $1-delta$ by making as few sequentially chosen noisy measurements of the form $x^toptheta^{ast}$ as possible. When $mathcal{X}=mathcal{Z}$, this setting generalizes linear bandits, and when $mathcal{X}$ is the standard basis vectors and $mathcal{Z}subset {0,1}^d$, combinatorial bandits. Such a transductive setting naturally arises when the set of measurement vectors is limited due to factors such as availability or cost. As an example, in drug discovery the compounds and dosages $mathcal{X}$ a practitioner may be willing to evaluate in the lab in vitro due to cost or safety reasons may differ vastly from those compounds and dosages $mathcal{Z}$ that can be safely administered to patients in vivo. Alternatively, in recommender systems for books, the set of books $mathcal{X}$ a user is queried about may be restricted to well known best-sellers even though the goal might be to recommend more esoteric titles $mathcal{Z}$. In this paper, we provide instance-dependent lower bounds for the transductive setting, an algorithm that matches these up to logarithmic factors, and an evaluation. In particular, we provide the first non-asymptotic algorithm for linear bandits that nearly achieves the information theoretic lower bound.

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