Delayed Bandits: When Do Intermediate Observations Help?Download PDF

Published: 20 Jul 2023, Last Modified: 29 Aug 2023EWRL16Readers: Everyone
Keywords: online learning, bandits with delay, regret minimization
TL;DR: We study a K-armed bandit with delayed feedback and intermediate observations. We identify the regime of the environment that ensures the intermediate observations help reduce regret.
Abstract: We study a $K$-armed bandit with delayed feedback and intermediate observations. We consider a model where intermediate observations have a form of a finite state, which is observed immediately after taking an action, whereas the loss is observed after an adversarially chosen delay. We show that the regime of the mapping of states to losses determines the complexity of the problem, irrespective of whether the mapping of actions to states is stochastic or adversarial. If the mapping of states to losses is adversarial, then the regret rate is of order $\sqrt{(K+d)T}$ (within log factors), where $T$ is the time horizon and $d$ is a fixed delay. This matches the regret rate of a $K$-armed bandit with delayed feedback and without intermediate observations, implying that intermediate observations are not helpful. However, if the mapping of states to losses is stochastic, we show that the regret grows at a rate of $\sqrt{\bigl(K+\min\{|\mathcal{S}|,d\}\bigr)T}$ (within log factors), implying that if the number $|\mathcal{S}|$ of states is smaller than the delay, then intermediate observations help. We also provide refined high-probability regret upper bounds for non-uniform delays, together with experimental validation of our algorithms.
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