Randomized Exploration in Generalized Linear Bandits
Abstract
We study two randomized algorithms for generalized linear bandits. The first, GLM-TSL, samples a generalized linear model (GLM) from the Laplace approximation to the posterior distribution. The second, GLM-FPL, fits a GLM to a randomly perturbed history of past rewards. We analyze both algorithms and derive O(d n K) upper bounds on their n-round regret, where d is the number of features and K is the number of arms. The former improves on prior work while the latter is the first for Gaussian noise perturbations in non-linear models. We empirically evaluate both GLM-TSL and GLM-FPL in logistic bandits, and apply GLM-FPL to neural network bandits. Our work showcases the role of randomization, beyond posterior sampling, in exploration.
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