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First-Order Bayesian Regret Analysis of Thompson Sampling

2 February 2019
Sébastien Bubeck
Mark Sellke
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Abstract

We address online combinatorial optimization when the player has a prior over the adversary's sequence of losses. In this framework, Russo and Van Roy proposed an information-theoretic analysis of Thompson Sampling based on the information ratio, resulting in optimal worst-case regret bounds. In this paper we introduce three novel ideas to this line of work. First we propose a new quantity, the scale-sensitive information ratio, which allows us to obtain more refined first-order regret bounds (i.e., bounds of the form L∗\sqrt{L^*}L∗​ where L∗L^*L∗ is the loss of the best combinatorial action). Second we replace the entropy over combinatorial actions by a coordinate entropy, which allows us to obtain the first optimal worst-case bound for Thompson Sampling in the combinatorial setting. Finally, we introduce a novel link between Bayesian agents and frequentist confidence intervals. Combining these ideas we show that the classical multi-armed bandit first-order regret bound O~(dL∗)\tilde{O}(\sqrt{d L^*})O~(dL∗​) still holds true in the more challenging and more general semi-bandit scenario. This latter result improves the previous state of the art bound O~((d+m3)L∗)\tilde{O}(\sqrt{(d+m^3)L^*})O~((d+m3)L∗​) by Lykouris, Sridharan and Tardos. Moreover we sharpen these results with two technical ingredients. The first leverages a recent insight of Zimmert and Lattimore to replace Shannon entropy with more refined potential functions in the analysis. The second is a \emph{Thresholded} Thompson sampling algorithm, which slightly modifies the original algorithm by never playing low-probability actions. This thresholding results in fully TTT-independent regret bounds when L∗L^*L∗ is almost surely upper-bounded, which we show does not hold for ordinary Thompson sampling.

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