LGAIROOCMLJul 1, 2020

Learning Search Space Partition for Black-box Optimization using Monte Carlo Tree Search

arXiv:2007.00708v2158 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of sample efficiency in high-dimensional optimization for applications like reinforcement learning, though it is an incremental extension of prior work.

The paper tackles high-dimensional black-box optimization by proposing LA-MCTS, a meta-algorithm that learns to partition the search space using nonlinear boundaries and local models, achieving strong performance on benchmarks, particularly for high-dimensional problems.

High dimensional black-box optimization has broad applications but remains a challenging problem to solve. Given a set of samples $\{\vx_i, y_i\}$, building a global model (like Bayesian Optimization (BO)) suffers from the curse of dimensionality in the high-dimensional search space, while a greedy search may lead to sub-optimality. By recursively splitting the search space into regions with high/low function values, recent works like LaNAS shows good performance in Neural Architecture Search (NAS), reducing the sample complexity empirically. In this paper, we coin LA-MCTS that extends LaNAS to other domains. Unlike previous approaches, LA-MCTS learns the partition of the search space using a few samples and their function values in an online fashion. While LaNAS uses linear partition and performs uniform sampling in each region, our LA-MCTS adopts a nonlinear decision boundary and learns a local model to pick good candidates. If the nonlinear partition function and the local model fits well with ground-truth black-box function, then good partitions and candidates can be reached with much fewer samples. LA-MCTS serves as a \emph{meta-algorithm} by using existing black-box optimizers (e.g., BO, TuRBO) as its local models, achieving strong performance in general black-box optimization and reinforcement learning benchmarks, in particular for high-dimensional problems.

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