Zhi-Wei Liu

h-index7
2papers

2 Papers

5.7LGMay 11
Learning to Sparsify Stochastic Linear Bandits

Zhengmiao Wang, Ming Chi, Zhi-Wei Liu et al.

This paper addresses the problem of learning to sparsify stochastic linear bandits, where a decision-maker sequentially selects actions from a high-dimensional space subject to a sparsity constraint on the number of nonzero elements in the action vector. The key challenge lies in minimizing cumulative regret while tackling the potential NP-hardness of finding optimal sparse actions due to the inherent combinatorial structure of the problem. We propose an adaptively phased exploration and exploitation algorithmic framework, utilizing ordinary least squares for parameter learning and specialized subroutines for sparse action selection. When the action set is a Euclidean ball, optimal sparse actions can be efficiently computed, enabling us to establish a $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(d\sqrt{T})$ regret, where $d$ is the dimension of the action vector and $T$ is the time horizon length. For general convex and compact action sets where finding optimal sparse actions is intractable, we employ a greedy subroutine. For general strongly convex action sets, we derive a $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(d \sqrt{T})$ $α$-regret; for general compact sets lacking strong convexity, we establish a $\tilde{\mathcal{O}}(d T^{2/3})$ $α$-regret, where $α$ pertains to the approximation ratio of the greedy algorithm. Finally, we validate the performance of our algorithms using extensive experiments including an application to recommendation system.

OCOct 31, 2024
Online Convex Optimization with Memory and Limited Predictions

Lintao Ye, Zhengmiao Wang, Zhi-Wei Liu et al.

We study the problem of online convex optimization with memory and predictions over a horizon $T$. At each time step, a decision maker is given some limited predictions of the cost functions from a finite window of future time steps, i.e., values of the cost function at certain decision points in the future. The decision maker then chooses an action and incurs a cost given by a convex function that depends on the actions chosen in the past. We propose an algorithm to solve this problem and show that the dynamic regret of the algorithm decays exponentially with the prediction window length. Our algorithm contains two general subroutines that work for wider classes of problems. The first subroutine can solve general online convex optimization with memory and bandit feedback with $\sqrt{T}$-dynamic regret with respect to $T$. The second subroutine is a zeroth-order method that can be used to solve general convex optimization problems with a linear convergence rate that matches the best achievable rate of first-order methods for convex optimization. The key to our algorithm design and analysis is the use of truncated Gaussian smoothing when querying the decision points for obtaining the predictions. We complement our theoretical results using numerical experiments.