Batch Bayesian Optimization for Replicable Experimental Design
This work addresses risk-averse optimization in experimental design for domains like agriculture and AutoML, though it is incremental as it builds on existing Bayesian optimization methods.
The paper tackles the problem of experimental design with parallel evaluations and heteroscedastic noise, proposing the BTS-RED framework with algorithms that adaptively choose replication numbers and achieve asymptotic no-regret guarantees, demonstrating effectiveness in precision agriculture and AutoML applications.
Many real-world experimental design problems (a) evaluate multiple experimental conditions in parallel and (b) replicate each condition multiple times due to large and heteroscedastic observation noise. Given a fixed total budget, this naturally induces a trade-off between evaluating more unique conditions while replicating each of them fewer times vs. evaluating fewer unique conditions and replicating each more times. Moreover, in these problems, practitioners may be risk-averse and hence prefer an input with both good average performance and small variability. To tackle both challenges, we propose the Batch Thompson Sampling for Replicable Experimental Design (BTS-RED) framework, which encompasses three algorithms. Our BTS-RED-Known and BTS-RED-Unknown algorithms, for, respectively, known and unknown noise variance, choose the number of replications adaptively rather than deterministically such that an input with a larger noise variance is replicated more times. As a result, despite the noise heteroscedasticity, both algorithms enjoy a theoretical guarantee and are asymptotically no-regret. Our Mean-Var-BTS-RED algorithm aims at risk-averse optimization and is also asymptotically no-regret. We also show the effectiveness of our algorithms in two practical real-world applications: precision agriculture and AutoML.