Tracking Most Significant Shifts in Infinite-Armed Bandits

Joe Suk, Jung-Hun Kim
Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning, PMLR 267:57311-57335, 2025.

Abstract

We study an infinite-armed bandit problem where actions’ mean rewards are initially sampled from a reservoir distribution. Most prior works in this setting focused on stationary rewards (Berry et al., 1997; Wang et al., 2008; Bonald and Proutiere, 2013; Carpentier and Valko, 2015) with the more challenging adversarial/non-stationary variant only recently studied in the context of rotting/decreasing rewards (Kim et al., 2022; 2024). Furthermore, optimal regret upper bounds were only achieved using parameter knowledge of non-stationarity and only known for certain regimes of regularity of the reservoir. This work shows the first parameter-free optimal regret bounds while also relaxing these distributional assumptions. We also study a natural notion of significant shift for this problem inspired by recent developments in finite-armed MAB (Suk & Kpotufe, 2022). We show that tighter regret bounds in terms of significant shifts can be adaptively attained. Our enhanced rates only depend on the rotting non-stationarity and thus exhibit an interesting phenomenon for this problem where rising non-stationarity does not factor into the difficulty of non-stationarity.

Cite this Paper


BibTeX
@InProceedings{pmlr-v267-suk25a, title = {Tracking Most Significant Shifts in Infinite-Armed Bandits}, author = {Suk, Joe and Kim, Jung-Hun}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning}, pages = {57311--57335}, year = {2025}, editor = {Singh, Aarti and Fazel, Maryam and Hsu, Daniel and Lacoste-Julien, Simon and Berkenkamp, Felix and Maharaj, Tegan and Wagstaff, Kiri and Zhu, Jerry}, volume = {267}, series = {Proceedings of Machine Learning Research}, month = {13--19 Jul}, publisher = {PMLR}, pdf = {https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mlresearch/v267/main/assets/suk25a/suk25a.pdf}, url = {https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/suk25a.html}, abstract = {We study an infinite-armed bandit problem where actions’ mean rewards are initially sampled from a reservoir distribution. Most prior works in this setting focused on stationary rewards (Berry et al., 1997; Wang et al., 2008; Bonald and Proutiere, 2013; Carpentier and Valko, 2015) with the more challenging adversarial/non-stationary variant only recently studied in the context of rotting/decreasing rewards (Kim et al., 2022; 2024). Furthermore, optimal regret upper bounds were only achieved using parameter knowledge of non-stationarity and only known for certain regimes of regularity of the reservoir. This work shows the first parameter-free optimal regret bounds while also relaxing these distributional assumptions. We also study a natural notion of significant shift for this problem inspired by recent developments in finite-armed MAB (Suk & Kpotufe, 2022). We show that tighter regret bounds in terms of significant shifts can be adaptively attained. Our enhanced rates only depend on the rotting non-stationarity and thus exhibit an interesting phenomenon for this problem where rising non-stationarity does not factor into the difficulty of non-stationarity.} }
Endnote
%0 Conference Paper %T Tracking Most Significant Shifts in Infinite-Armed Bandits %A Joe Suk %A Jung-Hun Kim %B Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning %C Proceedings of Machine Learning Research %D 2025 %E Aarti Singh %E Maryam Fazel %E Daniel Hsu %E Simon Lacoste-Julien %E Felix Berkenkamp %E Tegan Maharaj %E Kiri Wagstaff %E Jerry Zhu %F pmlr-v267-suk25a %I PMLR %P 57311--57335 %U https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/suk25a.html %V 267 %X We study an infinite-armed bandit problem where actions’ mean rewards are initially sampled from a reservoir distribution. Most prior works in this setting focused on stationary rewards (Berry et al., 1997; Wang et al., 2008; Bonald and Proutiere, 2013; Carpentier and Valko, 2015) with the more challenging adversarial/non-stationary variant only recently studied in the context of rotting/decreasing rewards (Kim et al., 2022; 2024). Furthermore, optimal regret upper bounds were only achieved using parameter knowledge of non-stationarity and only known for certain regimes of regularity of the reservoir. This work shows the first parameter-free optimal regret bounds while also relaxing these distributional assumptions. We also study a natural notion of significant shift for this problem inspired by recent developments in finite-armed MAB (Suk & Kpotufe, 2022). We show that tighter regret bounds in terms of significant shifts can be adaptively attained. Our enhanced rates only depend on the rotting non-stationarity and thus exhibit an interesting phenomenon for this problem where rising non-stationarity does not factor into the difficulty of non-stationarity.
APA
Suk, J. & Kim, J.. (2025). Tracking Most Significant Shifts in Infinite-Armed Bandits. Proceedings of the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning, in Proceedings of Machine Learning Research 267:57311-57335 Available from https://proceedings.mlr.press/v267/suk25a.html.

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