Sequential Estimation of Quantiles with Applications to A/B-testing and Best-arm Identification
Consider the problem of sequentially estimating quantiles of any distribution over a complete, fully-ordered set, based on a stream of i.i.d. observations.
We propose new, theoretically sound and practically tight confidence sequences for quantiles, that is, sequences of confidence intervals which are valid uniformly over time.
We give two methods for tracking a fixed quantile and two methods for tracking all quantiles simultaneously.
Specifically, we provide explicit expressions with small constants for intervals whose widths shrink at the fastest possible rate, as determined by the law of the iterated logarithm (LIL).
As a byproduct, we give a non-asymptotic concentration inequality for the empirical distribution function which holds uniformly over time with the LIL rate, thus strengthening Smirnov’s asymptotic empirical process LIL, and extending the famed Dvoretzky-Kiefer-Wolfowitz (DKW) inequality to hold uniformly over all sample sizes while only being about twice as wide in practice.
This inequality directly yields sequential analogues of the one- and two-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, and a test of stochastic dominance.
We apply our results to the problem of selecting an arm with an approximately best quantile in a multi-armed bandit framework, proving a state-of-the-art sample complexity bound for a novel allocation strategy.
Simulations demonstrate that our method stops with fewer samples than existing methods by a factor of five to fifty. Finally, we show how to compute confidence sequences for the difference between quantiles of two arms in an A/B test, along with corresponding always-valid p-values.
[Slides]
- Series:
- Microsoft Research Talks
- Date:
- Speakers:
- Aaditya Ramdas
- Affiliation:
- Carnegie Mellon University
-
-
Adith Swaminathan
Principal Researcher
-
-
Series: Microsoft Research Talks
-
Decoding the Human Brain – A Neurosurgeon’s Experience
Speakers:- Pascal Zinn,
- Ivan Tashev
-
-
-
-
Galea: The Bridge Between Mixed Reality and Neurotechnology
Speakers:- Eva Esteban,
- Conor Russomanno
-
Current and Future Application of BCIs
Speakers:- Christoph Guger
-
Challenges in Evolving a Successful Database Product (SQL Server) to a Cloud Service (SQL Azure)
Speakers:- Hanuma Kodavalla,
- Phil Bernstein
-
Improving text prediction accuracy using neurophysiology
Speakers:- Sophia Mehdizadeh
-
-
DIABLo: a Deep Individual-Agnostic Binaural Localizer
Speakers:- Shoken Kaneko
-
-
Recent Efforts Towards Efficient And Scalable Neural Waveform Coding
Speakers:- Kai Zhen
-
-
Audio-based Toxic Language Detection
Speakers:- Midia Yousefi
-
-
From SqueezeNet to SqueezeBERT: Developing Efficient Deep Neural Networks
Speakers:- Sujeeth Bharadwaj
-
Hope Speech and Help Speech: Surfacing Positivity Amidst Hate
Speakers:- Monojit Choudhury
-
-
-
-
-
'F' to 'A' on the N.Y. Regents Science Exams: An Overview of the Aristo Project
Speakers:- Peter Clark
-
Checkpointing the Un-checkpointable: the Split-Process Approach for MPI and Formal Verification
Speakers:- Gene Cooperman
-
Learning Structured Models for Safe Robot Control
Speakers:- Ashish Kapoor
-