LGMay 31

Decision-Focused On-Policy Learning for Contextual Linear Optimization with Partial Feedback

arXiv:2606.0108165.2Has Code
Predicted impact top 41% in LG · last 90 daysOriginality Highly original
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For researchers in decision-focused learning and contextual optimization, this work addresses the practical challenge of partial feedback in sequential settings, offering a theoretically grounded method with strong empirical performance.

The paper develops an on-policy learning method for sequential contextual linear optimization under partial feedback, using a hybrid gradient estimator that combines score function and decision-focused components. The method achieves lower cumulative regret than contextual-bandit baselines across four benchmarks, including a real-data energy-scheduling task.

Decision-focused learning (DFL) trains predictive models by optimizing downstream decision quality rather than standalone prediction accuracy. For contextual linear optimization, most existing DFL methods assume offline data and full observations of the objective cost vector. We develop an on-policy learning method for sequential contextual linear optimization under partial feedback, generalizing the standard bandit feedback setting. Our method learns a stochastic predict-then-optimize policy that samples a cost-vector prediction from a conditional distribution and solves the resulting downstream linear optimization problem. To update this distributional model, we introduce a two-component hybrid gradient estimator. The first component is a score function estimator, which provides an unbiased but potentially high-variance policy gradient estimate. The second is a decision-focused plug-in component that uses an auxiliary nuisance estimate of the latent cost vector to exploit the downstream optimization structure, becoming more informative as the estimate improves. We prove an $\mathcal{O}(T^{-1/2})$ bound on the average squared policy-gradient norm, matching the standard non-convex SGD rate. Experiments on top-$k$ selection, shortest path, combinatorial pricing, and a real-data energy-scheduling benchmark show that the hybrid gradient approach achieves lower cumulative regret than contextual-bandit-style baselines across all benchmarks, using both Gaussian and richer conditional generative models. Code is available at https://github.com/Joeyetinghan/on-policy-bandit-dfl.

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