Abstract
This paper introduces a federated learning framework tailored for online combinatorial optimization with bandit feedback. In this setting, agents select subsets of arms, observe noisy rewards for these subsets without accessing individual arm information, and can cooperate and share information at specific intervals. Our framework transforms any offline resilient single-agent (α - ϵ)-approximation algorithm-having a complexity of Õ (ψ/ϵβ), where the logarithm is omitted, for some function ψ and constant β-into an online multi-agent algorithm with m communicating agents and an α-regret of no more than Õ (m-1/3+β ψ 1/3+β T2+β/3+β). Our approach not only eliminates the ϵ approximation error but also ensures sublinear growth with respect to the time horizon T and demonstrates a linear speedup with an increasing number of communicating agents. Additionally, the algorithm is notably communication-efficient, requiring only a sublinear number of communication rounds, quantified as Õ (ψTβ/β+1). Furthermore, the framework has been successfully applied to online stochastic submodular maximization using various offline algorithms, yielding the first results for both single-agent and multi-agent settings and recovering specialized single-agent theoretical guarantees. We empirically validate our approach to a stochastic data summarization problem, illustrating the effectiveness of the proposed framework, even in single-agent scenarios.
Original language | English (US) |
---|---|
Pages | 13760-13782 |
Number of pages | 23 |
State | Published - 2024 |
Event | 41st International Conference on Machine Learning, ICML 2024 - Vienna, Austria Duration: Jul 21 2024 → Jul 27 2024 |
Conference
Conference | 41st International Conference on Machine Learning, ICML 2024 |
---|---|
Country/Territory | Austria |
City | Vienna |
Period | 07/21/24 → 07/27/24 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:Copyright 2024 by the author(s)
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Artificial Intelligence
- Software
- Control and Systems Engineering
- Statistics and Probability