COSYNE 2013 I Sunday, 3 March 7:30 Am Breakfast 8:30 Am Session 10: Learning/Decision Making Invited Speaker: P

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

COSYNE 2013 I Sunday, 3 March 7:30 Am Breakfast 8:30 Am Session 10: Learning/Decision Making Invited Speaker: P 10th Annual Meeting COSYNEComputational and Systems Neuroscience 2013 www.cosyne.org MAIN MEETING Feb 28 - Mar 3, 2013 Salt Lake City, UT Program Summary Thursday, 28 February 4:00 pm Registration opens 5:30 pm Welcome reception 6:20 pm Opening remarks 6:30 pm Session 1: Keynote Invited speaker: W. Bialek 7:30 pm Poster Session I Friday, 1 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 2: Circuits Invited speaker: E. Marder; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 3: Vision 6 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 4: Audition Invited speaker: B. Shinn-Cunningham; 3 accepted talks 4:00 pm Session 5: Sensory Processing Invited speaker: Y. Fregnac; 2 accepted talks 5:15 pm Dinner break 7:30 pm Poster Session II Saturday, 2 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 6: Coding/Computation Invited speaker: I. Fiete; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 7: Coding/Computation Invited speaker: T. Sejnowski; 3 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 8: Decision making Invited speaker: C. Brody; 3 accepted talks 4:00 pm Session 9: Networks Invited speaker: K. Boahen; 2 accepted talks 5:15 pm Dinner break 7:30 pm Poster Session III COSYNE 2013 i Sunday, 3 March 7:30 am Breakfast 8:30 am Session 10: Learning/Decision making Invited speaker: P. Schrater; 3 accepted talks 10:30 am Session 11: Behavior/Motor Invited speaker: D. Gordon; 3 accepted talks 12:00 pm Lunch break 2:00 pm Session 12: Neurons, Stimuli and Perception Invited speaker: A. Movshon; 1 accepted talk ii COSYNE 2013 Poster Session Topics Session I Session II Session III Thursday Friday Saturday Topic Area Cognition: attention, memory 1–3 1–3 1–2 Bayesian, optimality 4–10 4–8 3–9 Neural correlations, population coding 11–14 9–13 10–13 Cognition: decision making, reward, confidence 15–26 14–24 14–25 Neural encoding, decoding 27–33 25–31 26–32 Circuits 34–45 32–42 33–43 Basal ganglia, bird song, grid cells, hippocampus, 46–50 43–48 44–47 navigation Sensory: hearing 51–53 49–50 48–49 Cognition: objects, categories 54–55 51–53 50–52 Learning / plasticity 56–61 54–59 53–57 Motor systems 62–66 60–65 58–63 Oscillations 67–68 66–68 64–67 Sensory: adaptation, statistics, perception 69–71 69–70 68–70 Sensory: chemical, multisensory, somatosensory 72–76 71–74 71–75 Sensory: vision 77–89 75–88 76–88 Networks theory, modeling, computational 90–100 89–100 89–100 COSYNE 2013 iii The MIT Press The Neural Basis How We Remember of Free Will BRAIN MECHANISMS OF CRITERIAL CAUSATION EPISODIC MEMORY Peter Ulric Tse Michael E. Hasselmo A neuroscientific perspective on the A novel perspective on the biologi- mind–body problem that focuses on cal mechanisms of episodic memory, how the brain actually accomplishes focusing on the encoding and retrieval mental causation. of spatiotemporal trajectories. 384 pp., 28 illus., $38 cloth 336 pp., 8 color plates, 111 b&w illus., $40 cloth Brain and the Gaze Visual Population Codes ON THE ACTIVE BOUNDARIES TOWARD A COMMON MULTIVARIATE OF VISION FRAMEWORK FOR CELL RECORDING AND FUNCTIONAL IMAGING Jan Lauwereyns edited by Nikolaus Kriegeskorte A radically integrative account of visual and Gabriel Kreiman perception, grounded in neuroscience How visual content is represented in but drawing on insights from philoso- neuronal population codes and how to phy and psychology. analyze such codes with multivariate 312 pp., 49 illus., $40 cloth techniques. Computational Neuroscience series Discovering the Human 632 pp., 14 color plates, 151 b&w illus., $55 cloth Connectome Olaf Sporns Biological Learning A pioneer in the field outlines new em- and Control pirical and computational approaches HOW THE BRAIN BUILDS to mapping the neural connections of REPRESENTATIONS, PREDICTS the human brain. EVENTS, AND MAKES DECISIONS 224 pp., 17 color plates, 55 b&w illus., $35 cloth Reza Shadmehr and Sandro Mussa-Ivaldi Principles of Brain A novel theoretical framework that de- scribes a possible rationale for the regu- Dynamics larity in how we move, how we learn, GLOBAL STATE INTERACTIONS and how our brain predicts events. edited by Mikhail I. Rabinovich, Computational Neuroscience series • 400 pp., 133 illus., $40 cloth Karl J. Friston, and Pablo Varona Experimental and theoretical approaches back in print to global brain dynamics that draw on the latest research Sensory Communication in the field. edited by Walter A. Rosenblith Computational Available again: a landmark collec- Neuroscience series tion on sensation and perception that 360 pp., 36 color Visit our remains influential. plates, 94 b&w illus., BOOTH $65 cloth for a 30% 860 pp., $50 paper DISCOUNT The MIT Press mitpress.mit.edu is the new centre Empowered by imec, KU Leuven and VIB for Neuro-Electronics Research Flanders. NERF is a joint basic research initiative, Currently, NERF hosts four research set up by VIB, imec and KU Leuven to laboratories: understand the function of brain circuits. • chemosensory processing in zebrafish NERF labs are located in the heart of (Yaksi Lab) Europe in Leuven Belgium on imec’s • visual processing in mice (Bonin Lab) nanotechnology campus. At NERF, world- • memory processing and spatial class neuroscientists perform innovative, navigation in rodents (Kloosterman Lab) collaborative, interdisciplinary • learning and decision-making (Haesler lab) research, combining • neural circuitry of vision (Farrow Lab) nanoelectronics with and two visiting groups: neurobiology. • Optical control of neural activity in behaving animals (Battaglia Group) • Novel neural probes and large-scale anatomy (McNaughton Group) NERF is looking for enthusiastic, energetic early career researchers (at the PhD and postdoc level) with strong interests in systems neuroscience to join our laboratories. PhD students will have the opportunity to enroll in KU Leuven international PhD programs. For more information, visit our website (www.nerf.be). For applications, please contact individual PIs directly. Imec - NERF, Also visit us during Kapeldreef 75, the upcoming NERF 2013 3001 Leuven Belgium Neurotechnology Symposium on April 22-23 (www.nerf.be/symposium). Subscribe to Active Zone The Cell Press Neuroscience Newsletter Featuring: Cutting-edge neuroscience from Cell Press and beyond Interviews with leading neuroscientists Special features: Podcasts, Webinars and Review Issues Neural Currents - cultural events, exhibits and new books And much more Read now at bit.ly/activezone SEEKING C OMPUTATIONAL S CIENTIST IN S ENSORIMOTOR C ONTROL We are currently hiring to fill multiple full-time positions in engineering, and computational modeling of sensorimotor control at Brain Corporation, San Diego, CA. We are seeking exceptional candidates with practical experience in sensorimotor processing, reinforcement learning or action selection and who have excellent programming skills in C/C++, Python or MATLAB. TEN REASONS TO J OIN Do you have substantial experience in BRAIN C ORPORATION any of the following: constructing internal models and motor primitives; Work on the most exciting scientific challenge of the century. modeling locomotion, reaching and grasping; vision for navigation and Outstanding team of computational scientists, programmers, and control; oculomotor systems, engineers. proprioceptive systems, spinal cord, cerebellum, basal ganglia, or motor Industry-level salary, stock option grant, matching 401K, end of year cortex; or computational or theoretical bonus. research in spike coding, spiking network dynamics and plasticity? Health, dental, and vision insurance. Free breakfast and lunch at work; Please submit your CV/resume and relevant lots of healthly choices. papers to Dr. Eugene M. Izhikevich, CEO at [email protected] Free iPhone5 for new employees; free gadgets twice per year. Live 5 minutes from the Pacific WE APPLY NEUROSCIENCE TO ROBOTICS. WE Ocean. Surf or dive any day of the year. Bike to work. ARE INTRIGUED BY THE SECRETS OF THE BRAIN AND WE USE SIMULATIONS TO Bring your family to sunny San UNDERSTAND NEURAL COMPUTATIONS. WE Diego: beaches, zoo, Sea World, Legoland, Wild Animal Park. ARE PASSIONATE ABOUT CHANGING THE WORLD WITH SMARTER ROBOTS THAT HAVE Family-friendly events, all-expense- ARTIFICIAL NERVOUS SYSTEMS. paid holiday retreats, deep-sea fishing. Attend conferences. We even stay an extra day at the Cliff Lodge just to ski. Plexon is the pioneer and global leader in custom, high performance and comprehensive data acquisition, behavior and analysis solutions specifically designed for neuroscience research. ® ™ CinePlex PlexBright ® D OmniPlex Optogenetics Behavioral Research Data Acquisition SAVE THE DATE 4th Annual Plexon Neurophysiology Workshop www.plexon.com April 29 – May 2, 2013 COSYNE Ad_Final.indd 1 1/28/13 8:40 PM connect to neural interface system neuroscience research neuroprosthetic development Mac OSX, Windows, Linux up to 512 electrodes amplifier front ends for electrodes amplify, lter, and digitize biopotential signals surf D 16-channel dierential pairs - EMG surf S 32-channel single reference - EEG, ECog, ENG micro 32-channel single reference - spikes and LFP micro 32-channel single reference, record and +stim stimulate - spikes and LFP nano rodent microelectrode applications connect to other instruments and audio devices low-cost laboratory processor option for scout up to 128 channels. Contact us for a demonstration in your lab. toll free (866) 324-5197 local (801) 413-0139 fax (801) 413-2874 ® email [email protected] © 2013 ripple LLC, patents pending About Cosyne About Cosyne The annual Cosyne meeting provides an inclusive forum for the exchange of experimental and
Recommended publications
  • Incentives and Strategic Choices in the Secretary Problem by Nguyen
    Incentives and Strategic Choices In The Secretary Problem by Nguyen Le Truong A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Engineering - Industrial Engineering and Operations Research in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Ilan Adler, Chair Professor Shachar Kariv Professor Zuo-Jun Max Shen Fall 2013 Incentives and Strategic Choices In The Secretary Problem Copyright 2013 by Nguyen Le Truong 1 Abstract Incentives and Strategic Choices In The Secretary Problem by Nguyen Le Truong Doctor of Philosophy in Engineering - Industrial Engineering and Operations Research University of California, Berkeley Professor Ilan Adler, Chair Optimal policies for various secretary problems have an undesirable trait: they would interview applicants for the position, but those earlier ones are guaranteed to not get selected. Therefore, early applicants have incentive to not come in for their scheduled interviews, and as a direct consequence, the employer's intention to learn from the population becomes useless. Prior works have been done that tried to mitigate this issue, where the employer sacrifices her overall probability of selecting the best applicant by assigning equal selection probability to all interview slots. Among our results, we show such approaches can be costly for an employer with objectives different from the classical one. Furthermore, we generalize the classical setting to allow applicants to make independent choices with regard to their time of availability. This new game-theoretic approach solves the interviewing-without-hiring problem that arose earlier, and surprisingly, improves the employer's probability of selecting the best applicant from one obtained in the classical setting.
    [Show full text]
  • A Rank-Based Selection with Cardinal Payoffs and a Cost of Choice
    A rank-based selection with cardinal payoffs and a cost of choice ,1 Krzysztof Szajowski ∗ Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science Wroc law University of Technology Abstract A version of the secretary problem is considered. The ranks of items, whose val- ues are independent, identically distributed random variables X1, X2,...,Xn from a uniform distribution on [0; 1], are observed sequentially by the grader. He has to select exactly one item, when it appears, and receives a payoff which is a function of the unobserved realization of random variable assigned to the item diminished by some cost. The methods of analysis are based on the existence of an embedded Markov chain and use the technique of backward induction. The result is a gen- eralization of the selection model considered by Bearden (2006). The asymptotic behaviour of the solution is also investigated. Key words: optimal stopping, sequential search, secretary problem, rank-based selection, cardinal payoffs, Markov chain, 1991 MSC: Primary 60G40, 60K99; Secondary 90A46 62P15 arXiv:0812.3483v1 [math.OC] 18 Dec 2008 1 Introduction Although a version of the secretary problem (the beauty contest problem, the dowry problem or the marriage problem) was first solved by Cayley (1875), it was not until ∗ Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science, Wroc law University of Technology, Wybrze˙ze Wyspia´nskiego 27, Wroc law, Poland Email address: [email protected] (Krzysztof Szajowski). URL: http://neyman.im.pwr.wroc.pl/~szajow (Krzysztof Szajowski). 1 Institute of Mathematics, Polish Academy of Science, Sniadeckich´ 8, 00-956 Warszawa, Poland Preprint submitted to Elsevier 29 October 2018 five decades ago there had been sudden resurgence of interest in this problem.
    [Show full text]
  • Learning Near-Optimal Search in a Minimal Explore/Exploit Task
    Manuscript version: Author’s Accepted Manuscript The version presented in WRAP is the author’s accepted manuscript and may differ from the published version or Version of Record. Persistent WRAP URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/134006 How to cite: Please refer to published version for the most recent bibliographic citation information. If a published version is known of, the repository item page linked to above, will contain details on accessing it. Copyright and reuse: The Warwick Research Archive Portal (WRAP) makes this work by researchers of the University of Warwick available open access under the following conditions. Copyright © and all moral rights to the version of the paper presented here belong to the individual author(s) and/or other copyright owners. To the extent reasonable and practicable the material made available in WRAP has been checked for eligibility before being made available. Copies of full items can be used for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge. Provided that the authors, title and full bibliographic details are credited, a hyperlink and/or URL is given for the original metadata page and the content is not changed in any way. Publisher’s statement: Please refer to the repository item page, publisher’s statement section, for further information. For more information, please contact the WRAP Team at: [email protected]. warwick.ac.uk/lib-publications Threshold rules for exploration/exploitation 1 Simple threshold rules solve explore/exploit tradeoffs in a resource accumulation search task Running title: Threshold rules for exploration/exploitation Ke Sang1,2, Peter M.
    [Show full text]
  • The Economic Theory of Utility Applied to a Web-Based Search for a Romantic Partner
    Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal – Vol.4, No.1 Publication Date: Jan. 25, 2017 DoI:10.14738/assrj.41.2639. Mentell, E.H. (2017). The Economic Theory of Utility Applied to a Web-Based Search for a Romantic Partner. Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 4(1) 185-194. The Economic Theory of Utility Applied to a Web-Based Search for a Romantic Partner Edmund H. Mantell Professor of Economics and Finance Lubin School of Business, Pace University, New York, N.Y. Abstract There are a few published studies that address the actual behavior of people in scenarios where the subjects must conduct searches of the kind typical of online dating sites. The consensus of the empirical findings seems to be that people tend to stop searching too soon. On the other hand, a very common psychological attitude among those who use online dating sites is a refusal to “settle” for anything less than their ideal partner, or someone very close to it. This paper addresses the Question of how a man or a woman should apply the criterion of economic efficiency to choosing a person to pursue for a romantic relationship. The paper applies the mathematical theory of optimal stopping to a situation where a user of a dating website has identified a finite but perhaps very large sample of persons who are potential romantic partners. The paper applies the economic theory of a consumer’s utility function to establish a stopping rule which maximizes the likelihood that the searcher will meet the candidate who maximizes the searcher’s idiosyncratic attitudes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Duration of Optimal Stopping Problems
    arXiv: 1810.11557 THE DURATION OF OPTIMAL STOPPING PROBLEMS By Simon Demers Optimal stopping problems give rise to random distributions de- scribing how many applicants the decision-maker will sample or in- terview before choosing one, a quantity sometimes referred to as the search time or process duration. This research note surveys several variants of optimal stopping problems, extends earlier results in var- ious directions, and shows how many interviews are expected to be conducted in various settings. The focus is on problems that require a decision-maker to choose a candidate from a pool of sequential appli- cants with no recall, in the vein of previously studied Cayley-Moser, Secretary and Sultan's Dowry problems. 1. Introduction. Although optimal stopping problems have been stud- ied and refined extensively over time (Gilbert and Mosteller, 1966; Freeman, 1983; Ferguson, 1989a), relatively little is currently known about the statis- tical properties of the random distributions they give rise to. For example, it is not obvious how the expected number of observations (\applicants") to be considered (\interviewed") before one is ultimately chosen (\hired") will vary when the decision-maker (\employer") can observe the actual pay- off values (\talent") or when the horizon (\applicant pool") grows. This is unfortunate because it might be useful in some practical settings to antici- pate, for example, how many interviews the decision-maker should plausibly schedule or prepare for. This is what this research note attempts to elucidate. The focus is on the problem of choosing a candidate from a pool of ap- plicants with no recall and uniformly distributed talent.
    [Show full text]
  • Secretary Problems with Competing Employers
    Secretary problems with competing employers Nicole Immorlica1, Robert Kleinberg2?, and Mohammad Mahdian1 1 Microsoft Research, One Microsoft Way, Redmond, WA. fnickle,[email protected] 2 UC Berkeley Computer Science Division and Cornell University Computer Science Department. [email protected]. Abstract. In many decentralized labor markets, job candidates are of- fered positions at very early stages in the hiring process. It has been argued that these early offers are an effect of the competition between employers for the best candidate. This work studies the timing of offers in a theoretical model based on the classical secretary problem. We consider a secretary problem with multiple employers and study the equilibria of the induced game. Our results confirm the observation of early offers in labor markets: for several classes of strategies based on optimal stopping theory, as the number of employers grows, the timing of the earliest offer decreases. 1 Introduction An essential feature of many modern markets, particularly networked markets, is that they are online: information about agents, goods, and outcomes is revealed over time, and the agents must make irrevocable decisions before all of the information is revealed. A powerful tool for analyzing such scenarios is optimal stopping theory, the theory of problems which require optimizing an objective function over the space of stopping rules for a stochastic process. By combining optimal stopping theory with game theory, we can model the actions of rational agents applying competing stopping rules in an online market. Perhaps the best-known optimal stopping problem is the secretary problem, also known as the best-choice problem or marriage problem.
    [Show full text]
  • When to Stop? a Theoretical and Experimental Investigation of an Individual Search Task
    WHEN TO STOP? A THEORETICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF AN INDIVIDUAL SEARCH TASK Documents de travail GREDEG GREDEG Working Papers Series Imen Bouhlel Michela Chessa Agnès Festré Eric Guerci GREDEG WP No. 2019-40 https://ideas.repec.org/s/gre/wpaper.html Les opinions exprimées dans la série des Documents de travail GREDEG sont celles des auteurs et ne reflèlent pas nécessairement celles de l’institution. Les documents n’ont pas été soumis à un rapport formel et sont donc inclus dans cette série pour obtenir des commentaires et encourager la discussion. Les droits sur les documents appartiennent aux auteurs. The views expressed in the GREDEG Working Paper Series are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the institution. The Working Papers have not undergone formal review and approval. Such papers are included in this series to elicit feedback and to encourage debate. Copyright belongs to the author(s). When to stop? A theoretical and experimental investigation of an individual search task Imen Bouhlela,∗, Michela Chessaa, Agnès Festréa, Eric Guercia a Université Côte d’Azur, CNRS, Groupe de Recheche en Droit, Economie et Gestion, Nice, France GREDEG Working Paper No. 2019–40 Abstract Information search and opinion formation are central aspects of decision making in con- sumers choices. Indeed, before taking a decision, the alternatives among which the rational choice will be made should be clearly valued. In standard economic theory, the search dy- namics is generally neglected because the process is assumed to be carried out without any cost or without spending time. However, whenever only a significant collection of experi- ence can provide the bulk of relevant information to make the best choice, as it is the case for experience goods (Nelson, 1970), some engendered costs in collecting such information might be considered.
    [Show full text]
  • Optimal Stopping Rules
    Optimal Stopping Rules Subhash Suri January 9, 2020 1 Secretary Problem • In TCS and math, toy problems or puzzles often serve as useful abstractions for under- standing complex real-world problems. By stripping away unnecessary and irrelevant details, these simpler models can expose the underlying structure and complexity more clearly. • The secretary problem is one such famous problem that models a number of situations where the goal is to decide which candidate (solution) to choose. More broadly, what rule to follow in deciding when to stop searching? • The puzzle formulation and rules are as follows: 1. We (an administrator) want to hire the best secretary. 2. After the position is advertised, we receive a number of applications from the interested candidates. Suppose a total of n candidates have applied. 3. We will interview each candidate in the order they applied. 4. We assume a total order among these n candidates: rank 1 being the best, rank 2 second best etc. 5. However, this ranking is ordinal (not cardinal), meaning that once we interview i and j, we can tell which one is better (relative ordering), but we do not assign any numerical (cardinal) values to their abilities. 6. Unfortunately, it is an \seller's market" meaning that after we interview a candi- date, we need to immediately decide whether to offer her the position (in which we stop the search), or reject her and continue the search. If we reject a candidate, she is no longer available. 7. Our goal is to hire the best (top-ranked) candidate. 1 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Secretary Problems with Non-Uniform Arrival Order
    Secretary Problems with Non-Uniform Arrival Order Thomas Kesselheim∗ Robert Kleinberg† Rad Niazadeh† Abstract For a number of problems in the theory of online algorithms, it is known that the assumption that elements arrive in uniformly random order enables the design of algorithms with much better performance guarantees than under worst-case assumptions. The quintessential example of this phenomenon is the secretary problem, in which an algorithm attempts to stop a sequence at the moment it observes the maximum value in the sequence. As is well known, if the sequence is presented in uniformly random order there is an algorithm that succeeds with probability 1/e, whereas no non-trivial performance guarantee is possible if the elements arrive in worst-case order. In many of the applications of online algorithms, it is reasonable to assume there is some randomness in the input sequence, but unreasonable to assume that the arrival ordering is uni- formly random. This work initiates an investigation into relaxations of the random-ordering hypothesis in online algorithms, by focusing on the secretary problem and asking what perfor- mance guarantees one can prove under relaxed assumptions. Toward this end, we present two sets of properties of distributions over permutations as sufficient conditions, called the (p,q,δ)- block-independence property and (k,δ)-uniform-induced-ordering property. We show these two are asymptotically equivalent by borrowing some techniques from the celebrated approximation theory. Moreover, we show they both imply the existence of secretary algorithms with constant probability of correct selection, approaching the optimal constant1/e as the related parameters of the property tend towards their extreme values.
    [Show full text]
  • Optimal Stopping Methodology for the Secretary Problem with Random Queries
    OPTIMAL STOPPING METHODOLOGY FOR THE SECRETARY PROBLEM WITH RANDOM QUERIES BY GEORGE V. MOUSTAKIDES1,XUJUN LIU2,* AND OLGICA MILENKOVIC2,† 1Department of ECE, University of Patras, 26500 Rion, GREECE. [email protected] 2Department of ECE, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA. *[email protected]; †[email protected] Candidates arrive sequentially for an interview process which results in them being ranked relative to their predecessors. Based on the ranks available at each time, one must develop a decision mechanism that selects or dismisses the current candidate in an effort to maximize the chance to select the best. This classical version of the “Secretary problem” has been studied in depth using mostly combinatorial approaches, along with numerous other variants. In this work we consider a particular new version where during reviewing one is allowed to query an external expert to improve the probability of making the correct decision. Unlike existing formulations, we consider experts that are not necessarily infallible and may provide suggestions that can be faulty. For the solution of our problem we adopt a probabilistic methodology and view the querying times as consecutive stopping times which we optimize with the help of optimal stopping theory. For each querying time we must also design a mechanism to decide whether we should terminate the search at the querying time or not. This decision is straightforward under the usual assumption of infallible experts but, when experts are faulty, it has a far more intricate structure. 1. Introduction. The secretary problem, also known as the game of Googol, the beauty contest problem, and the dowry problem, was formally introduced in [6] while the first so- lution was obtained in [10].
    [Show full text]
  • Explore–Exploit Task
    LETTERS https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-018-0526-x Corrected: Publisher Correction Sources of suboptimality in a minimalistic explore–exploit task Mingyu Song 1,2,3,4, Zahy Bnaya2,3,4 and Wei Ji Ma 2,3* People often choose between sticking with an available action. The participant was told that they were a tourist in a foreign good option (exploitation) and trying out a new option that city. Restaurant ratings in this city ranged from 1.0 to 5.0 and fol- is uncertain but potentially more rewarding (exploration)1,2. lowed a truncated Gaussian distribution, which was visualized on Laboratory studies on explore–exploit decisions often con- the screen throughout the experiment (Fig. 1a). Each trial consisted tain real-world complexities such as non-stationary envi- of 5 to 10 virtual ‘days’. On each of the ‘days’, the participant decided ronments, stochasticity under exploitation and unknown to go either to a random new restaurant (exploration) or to the best reward distributions3–7. However, such factors might limit the restaurant so far (exploitation), and received a reward equal to the researcher’s ability to understand the essence of people’s rating of the restaurant. Their goal was to maximize the total reward explore–exploit decisions. For this reason, we introduce a of the entire trial. minimalistic task in which the optimal policy is to start off We denote the trial length by T, the reward by r, the action by exploring and to switch to exploitation at most once in each a (0 for exploitation and 1 for exploration), the highest reward sequence of decisions.
    [Show full text]
  • Robust Algorithms for the Secretary Problem
    Research Collection Conference Paper Robust algorithms for the secretary problem Author(s): Bradac, Domagoj; Gupta, Anupam; Singla, Sahil; Zuzic, Goran Publication Date: 2020 Permanent Link: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000395838 Originally published in: Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics 151, http://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2020.32 Rights / License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported This page was generated automatically upon download from the ETH Zurich Research Collection. For more information please consult the Terms of use. ETH Library Robust Algorithms for the Secretary Problem Domagoj Bradac ETH Zurich, Switzerland University of Zagreb, Croatia [email protected] Anupam Gupta Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA [email protected] Sahil Singla Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, USA [email protected] Goran Zuzic Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA [email protected] Abstract In classical secretary problems, a sequence of n elements arrive in a uniformly random order, and we want to choose a single item, or a set of size K. The random order model allows us to escape from the strong lower bounds for the adversarial order setting, and excellent algorithms are known in this setting. However, one worrying aspect of these results is that the algorithms overfit to the model: they are not very robust. Indeed, if a few “outlier” arrivals are adversarially placed in the arrival sequence, the algorithms perform poorly. E.g., Dynkin’s popular 1/e-secretary algorithm is sensitive to even a single adversarial arrival: if the adversary gives one large bid at the beginning of the stream, the algorithm does not select any element at all.
    [Show full text]