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Active Learning for Contextual Search with Binary Feedbacks

Abstract

In this paper, we study the learning problem in contextual search, which is motivated by applications such as first-price auction, personalized medicine experiments, and feature-based pricing experiments. In particular, for a sequence of arriving context vectors, with each context associated with an underlying value, the decision-maker either makes a query at a certain point or skips the context. The decision-maker will only observe the binary feedback on the relationship between the query point and the value associated with the context. We study a PAC learning setting, where the goal is to learn the underlying mean value function in context with a minimum number of queries. To address this challenge, we propose a tri-section search approach combined with a margin-based active learning method. We show that the algorithm only needs to make O(1/ε2)O(1/\varepsilon^2) queries to achieve an ϵ\epsilon-estimation accuracy. This sample complexity significantly reduces the required sample complexity in the passive setting, at least Ω(1/ε4)\Omega(1/\varepsilon^4).

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