Semi-supervised Batch Learning From Logged Data

Off-policy learning methods are intended to learn a policy from logged data, which includes context, action, and feedback (cost or reward) for each sample point. In this work, we build on the counterfactual risk minimization framework, which also assumes access to propensity scores. We propose learning methods for problems where feedback is missing for some samples, so there are samples with feedback and samples missing-feedback in the logged data. We refer to this type of learning as semi-supervised batch learning from logged data, which arises in a wide range of application domains. We derive a novel upper bound for the true risk under the inverse propensity score estimator to address this kind of learning problem. Using this bound, we propose a regularized semi-supervised batch learning method with logged data where the regularization term is feedback-independent and, as a result, can be evaluated using the logged missing-feedback data. Consequently, even though feedback is only present for some samples, a learning policy can be learned by leveraging the missing-feedback samples. The results of experiments derived from benchmark datasets indicate that these algorithms achieve policies with better performance in comparison with logging policies.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here