Nonstationary Reinforcement Learning: The Blessing of (More) Optimism

Author:

Cheung Wang Chi1ORCID,Simchi-Levi David2ORCID,Zhu Ruihao3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Industrial Systems Engineering and Management, National University of Singapore, 117576 Singapore;

2. Institute for Data, Systems, and Society, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Operations Research Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139;

3. SC Johnson College of Business, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853

Abstract

Motivated by operations research applications, such as inventory control and real-time bidding, we consider undiscounted reinforcement learning in Markov decision processes under model uncertainty and temporal drifts. In this setting, both the latent reward and state transition distributions are allowed to evolve over time, as long as their respective total variations, quantified by suitable metrics, do not exceed certain variation budgets. We first develop the sliding window upper confidence bound for reinforcement learning with confidence-widening (SWUCRL2-CW) algorithm and establish its dynamic regret bound when the variation budgets are known. In addition, we propose the bandit-over-reinforcement learning algorithm to adaptively tune the SWUCRL2-CW algorithm to achieve the same dynamic regret bound but in a parameter-free manner (i.e., without knowing the variation budgets). Finally, we conduct numerical experiments to show that our proposed algorithms achieve superior empirical performance compared with existing algorithms. Notably, under nonstationarity, historical data samples may falsely indicate that state transition rarely happens. This thus presents a significant challenge when one tries to apply the conventional optimism in the face of uncertainty principle to achieve a low dynamic regret bound. We overcome this challenge by proposing a novel confidence-widening technique that incorporates additional optimism into our learning algorithms. To extend our theoretical findings, we demonstrate, in the context of single-item inventory control with lost sales, fixed cost, and zero lead time, how one can leverage special structures on the state transition distributions to achieve improved dynamic regret bound in time-varying demand environments. This paper was accepted by J. George Shanthikumar, data science. Funding: The authors acknowledge support from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Data Science Laboratory and the MIT–IBM partnership in artificial intelligence. W. C. Cheung acknowledges support from the Singapore Ministry of Education [Tier 2 Grant MOE-T2EP20121-0012]. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4704 .

Publisher

Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

Subject

Management Science and Operations Research,Strategy and Management

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