Researcher profile

Eric Laber

Eric Laber contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

ResearcherAffiliation not importedOpen to collaborate

Trust snapshot

Quick read

Trust 19 - UnverifiedVerification L1Unclaimed author
5works
0followers
4topics
4close collaborators

Actions

Decide how to stay connected

Follow researcher0

Identity and collaboration

How to connect with this researcher

Claiming links this public author record to a researcher profile and unlocks direct collaboration workflows.

Log in to claim

Direct collaboration

Open a focused conversation when the fit is right

Claim this author entity first to unlock direct invitations.

Research graph

See the researcher in context

Open full explorer

Inspect adjacent work, topics, institutions and collaborators without jumping out to a separate graph page.

Building this graph slice

BZPEER is loading the nearby papers, people, topics and institutions for this page.

Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Adaptive Policy Learning Under Unknown Network Interference

Adaptive experimentation under unknown network interference requires solving two coupled problems: (i) learning the underlying dynamics of interference among units and (ii) using these dynamics to inform treatment allocation in order to maximize a cumulative outcome of interest (e.g. revenue). Existing adaptive experimentation methods either assume the interference network is fully known or bypass the network by operating on coarse cluster-level randomizations. We develop a Thompson sampling algorithm that jointly learns the interference network and adaptively optimizes individual-level treatment allocations via a Gibbs sampler. The algorithm returns both an optimized treatment policy and an estimate of the interference network; the latter supports downstream causal analyses such as estimation of direct, indirect, and total treatment effects. For additive spillover models, we show that total reward is linear in the treatment vector with coefficients given by an $n$-dimensional latent score. We prove a Bayesian regret bound of order $\sqrt{nT \cdot B \log(en/B)}$ for exact posterior sampling; empirically, our Gibbs-based approximate sampler achieves regret consistent with this rate and remains sublinear when the additive spillovers assumption is violated. For general Neighborhood Interference, where this reduction is unavailable, we analyze an explore-then-commit variant with $O(n^2 \log T)$ graph-discovery cost. An information-theoretic $Ω(n \log T)$ lower bound complements both results. Empirically, our method achieves more than an order-of-magnitude reduction in regret in head-to-head comparisons. On two real-world networks, the algorithm achieves sublinear regret and yields downstream effect estimates with small RMSE relative to the truth.

preprint2024arXiv

Adaptive Randomization Methods for Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trials (SMARTs) via Thompson Sampling

Response-adaptive randomization (RAR) has been studied extensively in conventional, single-stage clinical trials, where it has been shown to yield ethical and statistical benefits, especially in trials with many treatment arms. However, RAR and its potential benefits are understudied in sequential multiple assignment randomized trials (SMARTs), which are the gold-standard trial design for evaluation of multi-stage treatment regimes. We propose a suite of RAR algorithms for SMARTs based on Thompson Sampling (TS), a widely used RAR method in single-stage trials in which treatment randomization probabilities are aligned with the estimated probability that the treatment is optimal. We focus on two common objectives in SMARTs: (i) comparison of the regimes embedded in the trial, and (ii) estimation of an optimal embedded regime. We develop valid post-study inferential procedures for treatment regimes under the proposed algorithms. This is nontrivial, as (even in single-stage settings) RAR can lead to nonnormal limiting distributions of estimators. Our algorithms are the first for RAR in multi-stage trials that account for nonregularity in the estimand. Empirical studies based on real-world SMARTs show that TS can improve in-trial subject outcomes without sacrificing efficiency for post-trial comparisons.

preprint2020arXiv

Latent-state models for precision medicine

Observational longitudinal studies are a common means to study treatment efficacy and safety in chronic mental illness. In many such studies, treatment changes may be initiated by either the patient or by their clinician and can thus vary widely across patients in their timing, number, and type. Indeed, in the observational longitudinal pathway of the STEP-BD study of bipolar depression, one of the motivations for this work, no two patients have the same treatment history even after coarsening clinic visits to a weekly time-scale. Estimation of an optimal treatment regime using such data is challenging as one cannot naively pool together patients with the same treatment history, as is required by methods based on inverse probability weighting, nor is it possible to apply backwards induction over the decision points, as is done in Q-learning and its variants. Thus, additional structure is needed to effectively pool information across patients and within a patient over time. Current scientific theory for many chronic mental illnesses maintains that a patient's disease status can be conceptualized as transitioning among a small number of discrete states. We use this theory to inform the construction of a partially observable Markov decision process model of patient health trajectories wherein observed health outcomes are dictated by a patient's latent health state. Using this model, we derive and evaluate estimators of an optimal treatment regime under two common paradigms for quantifying long-term patient health. The finite sample performance of the proposed estimator is demonstrated through a series of simulation experiments and application to the observational pathway of the STEP-BD study. We find that the proposed method provides high-quality estimates of an optimal treatment strategy in settings where existing approaches cannot be applied without ad hoc modifications.

preprint2020arXiv

Sex Trafficking Detection with Ordinal Regression Neural Networks

Sex trafficking is a global epidemic. Escort websites are a primary vehicle for selling the services of such trafficking victims and thus a major driver of trafficker revenue. Many law enforcement agencies do not have the resources to manually identify leads from the millions of escort ads posted across dozens of public websites. We propose an ordinal regression neural network to identify escort ads that are likely linked to sex trafficking. Our model uses a modified cost function to mitigate inconsistencies in predictions often associated with nonparametric ordinal regression and leverages recent advancements in deep learning to improve prediction accuracy. The proposed method significantly improves on the previous state-of-the-art on Trafficking-10K, an expert-annotated dataset of escort ads. Additionally, because traffickers use acronyms, deliberate typographical errors, and emojis to replace explicit keywords, we demonstrate how to expand the lexicon of trafficking flags through word embeddings and t-SNE.

preprint2020arXiv

Variance decompositions for extensive-form games

Quantitative measures of randomness in games are useful for game design and have implications for gambling law. We treat the outcome of a game as a random variable and derive a closed-form expression and estimator for the variance in the outcome attributable to a player of the game. We analyze poker hands to show that randomness in the cards dealt has little influence on the outcomes of each hand. A simple example is given to demonstrate how variance decompositions can be used to measure other interesting properties of games.