_He's older than anyone can tell. Older than the trees. Older than anybody._ For as long as she can remember, Lucy has wanted to catch a glimpse of the mysterious green man who lives in Grandpa Will's garden: _Lob._ You have to be very special to see him; that's what Grandpa says. Lucy's parents t
The Lob–Pass Problem
✍ Scribed by Jun-ichi Takeuchi; Naoki Abe; Shun-ichi Amari
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 396 KB
- Volume
- 61
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-0000
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
We consider a new variant of the online learning model in which the goal of an agent is to choose his or her actions so as to maximize the number of successes, while learning about his or her reacting environment through those very actions. In particular, we consider a model of tennis play, in which the only actions that the player can take are a pass and a lob, and the opponent is modeled by two linear (probabilistic) functions f L (r)=a 1 r+b 1 and f P (r)= a 2 r+b 2 , specifying the probability that a lob (and a pass, respectively) will win a point when the proportion of lobs played in the past trials is r. We measure the performance of a player in this model by his or her expected regret, namely how many fewer points the player expects to win as compared to the ideal player (one that knows the two probabilistic functions) as a function of t, the total number of trials, which is unknown to the player a priori. Assuming that the probabilistic functions satisfy the ``matching shoulders condition,'' i.e., f L (0)= f P (1), we obtain a variety of upper bounds for assumptions and restrictions of varying degrees, ranging from O(log t), O(t 1Â2 ), O(t 3Â5 ), O(t 2Â3 ) to O(t 5Â7 ) as well as a matching lower bound of order 0(log t) for the first case. When the total number of trials t is given to the player in advance, the upper bounds can be improved significantly. An extended
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