On the Peril of (Even a Little) Nonstationarity in Satisficing Regret Minimization
Abstract
Motivated by the principle of satisficing in decision-making, we study satisficing regret guarantees for nonstationary K-armed bandits. We show that in the general realizable, piecewise-stationary setting with L stationary segments, the optimal regret is (L T) as long as L≥ 2. This stands in sharp contrast to the case of L=1 (i.e., the stationary setting), where a T-independent (1) satisficing regret is achievable under realizability. In other words, the optimal regret has to scale with T even if just a little nonstationarity presents. A key ingredient in our analysis is a novel Fano-based framework tailored to nonstationary bandits via a post-interaction reference construction. This framework strictly extends the classical Fano method for passive estimation as well as recent interactive Fano techniques for stationary bandits. As a complement, we also discuss a special regime in which constant satisficing regret is again possible.
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