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ICML
2010
IEEE

Gaussian Process Optimization in the Bandit Setting: No Regret and Experimental Design

14 years 1 months ago
Gaussian Process Optimization in the Bandit Setting: No Regret and Experimental Design
Many applications require optimizing an unknown, noisy function that is expensive to evaluate. We formalize this task as a multiarmed bandit problem, where the payoff function is either sampled from a Gaussian process (GP) or has low RKHS norm. We resolve the important open problem of deriving regret bounds for this setting, which imply novel convergence rates for GP optimization. We analyze GP-UCB, an intuitive upper-confidence based algorithm, and bound its cumulative regret in terms of maximal information gain, establishing a novel connection between GP optimization and experimental design. Moreover, by bounding the latter in terms of operator spectra, we obtain explicit sublinear regret bounds for many commonly used covariance functions. In some important cases, our bounds have surprisingly weak dependence on the dimensionality. In our experiments on real sensor data, GP-UCB compares favorably with other heuristical GP optimization approaches.
Niranjan Srinivas, Andreas Krause, Sham Kakade, Ma
Added 09 Nov 2010
Updated 09 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where ICML
Authors Niranjan Srinivas, Andreas Krause, Sham Kakade, Matthias Seeger
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