Affiliation:
1. School of Operations Research and Information Engineering and Cornell Tech, Cornell University, New York, New York 10044;
2. School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
Abstract
Incorporating side observations in decision making can reduce uncertainty and boost performance, but it also requires that we tackle a potentially complex predictive relationship. Although one may use off-the-shelf machine learning methods to separately learn a predictive model and plug it in, a variety of recent methods instead integrate estimation and optimization by fitting the model to directly optimize downstream decision performance. Surprisingly, in the case of contextual linear optimization, we show that the naïve plug-in approach actually achieves regret convergence rates that are significantly faster than methods that directly optimize downstream decision performance. We show this by leveraging the fact that specific problem instances do not have arbitrarily bad near-dual-degeneracy. Although there are other pros and cons to consider as we discuss and illustrate numerically, our results highlight a nuanced landscape for the enterprise to integrate estimation and optimization. Our results are overall positive for practice: predictive models are easy and fast to train using existing tools; simple to interpret; and, as we show, lead to decisions that perform very well. This paper was accepted by Hamid Nazerzadeh, data science.
Publisher
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)
Subject
Management Science and Operations Research,Strategy and Management
Cited by
15 articles.
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