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MERMAIDE: Learning to Align Learners using Model-Based Meta-Learning

Machine Learning 2024-01-11 v2

Abstract

We study how a principal can efficiently and effectively intervene on the rewards of a previously unseen learning agent in order to induce desirable outcomes. This is relevant to many real-world settings like auctions or taxation, where the principal may not know the learning behavior nor the rewards of real people. Moreover, the principal should be few-shot adaptable and minimize the number of interventions, because interventions are often costly. We introduce MERMAIDE, a model-based meta-learning framework to train a principal that can quickly adapt to out-of-distribution agents with different learning strategies and reward functions. We validate this approach step-by-step. First, in a Stackelberg setting with a best-response agent, we show that meta-learning enables quick convergence to the theoretically known Stackelberg equilibrium at test time, although noisy observations severely increase the sample complexity. We then show that our model-based meta-learning approach is cost-effective in intervening on bandit agents with unseen explore-exploit strategies. Finally, we outperform baselines that use either meta-learning or agent behavior modeling, in both 00-shot and K=1K=1-shot settings with partial agent information.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2304.04668,
  title  = {MERMAIDE: Learning to Align Learners using Model-Based Meta-Learning},
  author = {Arundhati Banerjee and Soham Phade and Stefano Ermon and Stephan Zheng},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2304.04668},
  year   = {2024}
}

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Published in TMLR

R2 v1 2026-06-28T09:57:39.450Z