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Thorsten Joachims, Cornell University, OH 14, E23

Event Date: November 19, 2015 16:15


From Average Treatment Effects to Batch Learning from Bandit Feedback

Log data is one of the most ubiquitous forms of data available, as it can be recorded from a variety of systems (e.g., search engines, recommender systems, ad placement) at little cost. The interaction logs of such systems (e.g., an online newspaper) typically contain a record of the input to the system (e.g., features describing the user), the prediction made by the system (e.g., a recommended list of news articles) and the feedback (e.g., number of articles the user read). This feedback, however, provides only partial-information feedback -- aka ''contextual bandit feedback'' -- limited to the particular prediction shown by the system. This is fundamentally different from conventional supervised learning, where ''correct'' predictions (e.g., the best ranking of news articles for that user) together with a loss function provide full-information feedback.

In this talk, I will explore approaches and methods for batch learning from logged bandit feedback (BLBF). Unlike the well-explored problem of online learning with bandit feedback, batch learning with bandit feedback does not require interactive experimental control of the underlying system, but merely exploits log data collected in the past. The talk explores how Empirical Risk Minimization can be used for BLBF, the suitability of various counterfactual risk estimators in this context, and a new learning method for structured output prediction in the BLBF setting. From this, I will draw connections to methods for causal inference in Statistics and Economics.

Joint work with Adith Swaminathan.

Bio
Thorsten Joachims is a Professor in the Department of Computer Science and the Department of Information Science at Cornell University. His research interests center on a synthesis of theory and system building in machine learning, with applications in information access, language technology, and recommendation. His past research focused on support vector machines, text classification, structured output prediction, convex optimization, learning to rank, learning with preferences, and learning from implicit feedback. In 2001, he finished his dissertation advised by Prof. Katharina Morik at the University of Dortmund. From 1994 to 1996 he was a visiting scholar with Prof. Tom Mitchell at Carnegie Mellon University. He is an ACM Fellow, AAAI Fellow, and Humboldt Fellow.

 



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