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Bayesian optimization is a popular framework for efficiently finding high-quality solutions to difficult problems based on limited prior information. As a rule, these algorithms operate by iteratively choosing what to try next until some predefined budget has been exhausted. We investigate replacing this de facto stopping rule with an (, ) -criterion: stop when a solution has been found whose value is within > 0 of the optimum with probability at least 1 - under the model. Given access to the prior distribution of problems, we show how to verify this condition in practice using a limited number of draws from the posterior. For Gaussian process priors, we prove that Bayesian optimization with the proposed criterion stops in finite time and returns a point that satisfies the (, ) -criterion under mild assumptions. These findings are accompanied by extensive empirical results which demonstrate the strengths and weaknesses of this approach.
James T. Wilson (Mon,) studied this question.
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