Bayesian Search for Robust Optima
This addresses the need for robust designs in expensive optimization problems, such as robotics, but is incremental as it builds on existing Bayesian optimization techniques.
The paper tackles the problem of robust optimization for expensive black-box functions by proposing a Bayesian optimization method to find regions of design space where performance is insensitive to inputs while maintaining good quality, and demonstrates that it outperforms two state-of-the-art approaches on six test functions and two real-world robot arm problems.
Many expensive black-box optimisation problems are sensitive to their inputs. In these problems it makes more sense to locate a region of good designs, than a single-possibly fragile-optimal design. Expensive black-box functions can be optimised effectively with Bayesian optimisation, where a Gaussian process is a popular choice as a prior over the expensive function. We propose a method for robust optimisation using Bayesian optimisation to find a region of design space in which the expensive function's performance is relatively insensitive to the inputs whilst retaining a good quality. This is achieved by sampling realisations from a Gaussian process that is modelling the expensive function, and evaluating the improvement for each realisation. The expectation of these improvements can be optimised cheaply with an evolutionary algorithm to determine the next location at which to evaluate the expensive function. We describe an efficient process to locate the optimum expected improvement. We show empirically that evaluating the expensive function at the location in the candidate uncertainty region about which the model is most uncertain, or at random, yield the best convergence in contrast to exploitative schemes. We illustrate our method on six test functions in two, five, and ten dimensions, and demonstrate that it is able to outperform two state-of-the-art approaches from the literature. We also demonstrate our method one two real-world problems in 4 and 8 dimensions, which involve training robot arms to push objects onto targets.