Are Random Decompositions All We Need in High Dimensional Bayesian Optimisation?

Abstract

Learning decompositions of expensive-to-evaluate black-box functions promises to scale Bayesian optimisation (BO) to high-dimensional problems. However, the success of these techniques depends on finding proper decompositions that accurately represent the black-box. While previous works learn those decompositions based on data, we investigate data-independent decomposition sampling rules in this paper. We find that data-driven learners of decompositions can be easily misled towards local decompositions that do not hold globally across the search space. Then, we formally show that a random tree-based decomposition sampler exhibits favourable theoretical guarantees that effectively trade off maximal information gain and functional mismatch between the actual black-box and its surrogate as provided by the decomposition. Those results motivate the development of the random decomposition upper-confidence bound algorithm (RDUCB) that is straightforward to implement - (almost) plug-and-play - and, surprisingly, yields significant empirical gains compared to the previous state-of-the-art on a comprehensive set of benchmarks. We also confirm the plug-and-play nature of our modelling component by integrating our method with HEBO, showing improved practical gains in the highest dimensional tasks from Bayesmark problem suite.

Cite

Text

Ziomek and Bou Ammar. "Are Random Decompositions All We Need in High Dimensional Bayesian Optimisation?." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2023.

Markdown

[Ziomek and Bou Ammar. "Are Random Decompositions All We Need in High Dimensional Bayesian Optimisation?." International Conference on Machine Learning, 2023.](https://mlanthology.org/icml/2023/ziomek2023icml-random/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{ziomek2023icml-random,
  title     = {{Are Random Decompositions All We Need in High Dimensional Bayesian Optimisation?}},
  author    = {Ziomek, Juliusz Krzysztof and Bou Ammar, Haitham},
  booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning},
  year      = {2023},
  pages     = {43347-43368},
  volume    = {202},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/icml/2023/ziomek2023icml-random/}
}