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by btilly
5127 days ago
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I know there is a lot of literature, which I'm unfortunately less familiar with than I'd like to be. Here is the specific problem that I am interested in. Suppose we have a multi-armed bandit where the probability of reward are different on every pull. The distribution of rewards are not known. It is known that there is one arm which, on every pull, has a minimum percentage chance by which it is more likely to produce a reward if pulled than any other arm. Which arm this is is unknown, as is the minimum percentage. In other words payoff percentages change quickly, but the winner is always a winner, and your job is to find it. I have an algorithm that succeeds with only logarithmic regret. I have no idea whether anyone else has come up with the same idea, and there is so much literature (much of which I presume is locked up behind paywalls) that I cannot easily verify whether anyone else has looked at this variant. |
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There are many, many different variations of the method and result. For example, you can show improved results assuming different things about the rewards. For exapmle, you can show O(log(T)) regret with certain additional assumptions. This is a really good book on different non-stochastic online learning problems: http://www.ii.uni.wroc.pl/~lukstafi/pmwiki/uploads/AGT/Predi...