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Active Learning for Level Set Estimation Using Randomized Straddle Algorithms

Main:12 Pages
5 Figures
Bibliography:2 Pages
2 Tables
Appendix:9 Pages
Abstract

Level set estimation (LSE), the problem of identifying the set of input points where a function takes value above (or below) a given threshold, is important in practical applications. When the function is expensive-to-evaluate and black-box, the \textit{straddle} algorithm, which is a representative heuristic for LSE based on Gaussian process models, and its extensions having theoretical guarantees have been developed. However, many of existing methods include a confidence parameter βt1/2\beta^{1/2}_t that must be specified by the user, and methods that choose βt1/2\beta^{1/2}_t heuristically do not provide theoretical guarantees. In contrast, theoretically guaranteed values of βt1/2\beta^{1/2}_t need to be increased depending on the number of iterations and candidate points, and are conservative and not good for practical performance. In this study, we propose a novel method, the \textit{randomized straddle} algorithm, in which βt\beta_t in the straddle algorithm is replaced by a random sample from the chi-squared distribution with two degrees of freedom. The confidence parameter in the proposed method has the advantages of not needing adjustment, not depending on the number of iterations and candidate points, and not being conservative. Furthermore, we show that the proposed method has theoretical guarantees that depend on the sample complexity and the number of iterations. Finally, we confirm the usefulness of the proposed method through numerical experiments using synthetic and real data.

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