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Adaptive Neyman Allocation

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  • Jinglong Zhao

Abstract

In experimental design, Neyman allocation refers to the practice of allocating subjects into treated and control groups, potentially in unequal numbers proportional to their respective standard deviations, with the objective of minimizing the variance of the treatment effect estimator. This widely recognized approach increases statistical power in scenarios where the treated and control groups have different standard deviations, as is often the case in social experiments, clinical trials, marketing research, and online A/B testing. However, Neyman allocation cannot be implemented unless the standard deviations are known in advance. Fortunately, the multi-stage nature of the aforementioned applications allows the use of earlier stage observations to estimate the standard deviations, which further guide allocation decisions in later stages. In this paper, we introduce a competitive analysis framework to study this multi-stage experimental design problem. We propose a simple adaptive Neyman allocation algorithm, which almost matches the information-theoretic limit of conducting experiments. Using online A/B testing data from a social media site, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our adaptive Neyman allocation algorithm, highlighting its practicality especially when applied with only a limited number of stages.

Suggested Citation

  • Jinglong Zhao, 2023. "Adaptive Neyman Allocation," Papers 2309.08808, arXiv.org, revised Sep 2023.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2309.08808
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Cai, Yong & Rafi, Ahnaf, 2024. "On the performance of the Neyman Allocation with small pilots," Journal of Econometrics, Elsevier, vol. 242(1).
    2. Masahiro Kato, 2023. "Locally Optimal Fixed-Budget Best Arm Identification in Two-Armed Gaussian Bandits with Unknown Variances," Papers 2312.12741, arXiv.org, revised Mar 2024.
    3. Harrison H. Li & Art B. Owen, 2023. "Double machine learning and design in batch adaptive experiments," Papers 2309.15297, arXiv.org.

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