Ranking and Selection with Covariates for Personalized Decision Making

Feb 12, 2021·
Haihui Shen
Haihui Shen
L. Jeff Hong
L. Jeff Hong
Xiaowei Zhang
Xiaowei Zhang
· 0 min read
Abstract
We consider a ranking and selection problem in the context of personalized decision making, where the best alternative is not universal but varies as a function of observable covariates. The goal of ranking and selection with covariates (R&S-C) is to use sampling to compute a decision rule that can specify the best alternative with certain statistical guarantee for each subsequent individual after observing his or her covariates. A linear model is proposed to capture the relationship between the mean performance of an alternative and the covariates. Under the indifference-zone formulation, we develop two-stage procedures for both homoscedastic and heteroscedastic sampling errors, respectively, and prove their statistical validity, which is defined in terms of probability of correct selection. We also generalize the well-known slippage configuration, and prove that the generalized slippage configuration is the least favorable configuration of our procedures. Extensive numerical experiments are conducted to investigate the performance of the proposed procedures. Finally, we demonstrate the usefulness of R&S-C via a case study of selecting the best treatment regimen in the prevention of esophageal cancer. We find that by leveraging disease-related personal information, R&S-C can improve substantially the expected quality-adjusted life years for some groups of patients through providing patient-specific treatment regimen.
Type
Publication
INFORMS Journal on Computing 33(4):1500–1519
publications
Haihui Shen
Authors
Associate Professor in the Sino-US Global Logistics Institute, Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
L. Jeff Hong
Authors
Professor in Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Minnesota.
Xiaowei Zhang
Authors
I am an Associate Professor at HKUST, jointly appointed in the Department of Industrial Engineering and Decision Analytics and the Department of Economics, and the Academic Director of the MSc in FinTech program. I serve as an Associate Editor for several leading journals in the field, including Management Science, Operations Research, Navel Research Logistics, and Queueing Systems.