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Param Budhraja

Param Budhraja contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Data Deletion Can Help in Adaptive RL

Deploying reinforcement learning policies in the real world requires adapting to time-varying environments. We study this problem in the contextual Markov Decision Process (cMDP) framework, where a family of environments is indexed by a low-dimensional context unknown at test time. The standard approach decomposes the problem: train a so-called "universal policy" which assumes knowledge of the true context, then pair it with a context estimator which approximates context using the observed trajectory. We identify a simple, counterintuitive trick that substantially improves the estimator: randomly delete a fraction of the training buffer after each round. This works because data is collected across multiple rounds using progressively better policies, and older trajectories come from a different distribution than what the estimator will face at deployment time; random deletion creates an implicit exponential decay on older data while preserving diversity without requiring any explicit identification of which samples are stale. This reduces robustness gap by 30% for MLPs and by 6% on average for recurrent networks. Strikingly, it allows a narrow MLP with 5x fewer parameters to outperform a wide MLP trained without deletion. To understand when and why deletion helps, we analyze regularized empirical risk minimization with a mismatch between the train distribution and the distribution at deployment; in this idealized setting, we prove that removing a single uniformly random training point decreases expected test loss in expectation under mild conditions. For ridge regression we make this quantitative: deletion helps when the regularization coefficient is moderate and the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is sufficiently low, and, crucially, this SNR threshold gives a direct measure of how large the distribution mismatch between training and deployment must be for deletion to be beneficial.

preprint2022arXiv

Breaking the Convergence Barrier: Optimization via Fixed-Time Convergent Flows

Accelerated gradient methods are the cornerstones of large-scale, data-driven optimization problems that arise naturally in machine learning and other fields concerning data analysis. We introduce a gradient-based optimization framework for achieving acceleration, based on the recently introduced notion of fixed-time stability of dynamical systems. The method presents itself as a generalization of simple gradient-based methods suitably scaled to achieve convergence to the optimizer in a fixed-time, independent of the initialization. We achieve this by first leveraging a continuous-time framework for designing fixed-time stable dynamical systems, and later providing a consistent discretization strategy, such that the equivalent discrete-time algorithm tracks the optimizer in a practically fixed number of iterations. We also provide a theoretical analysis of the convergence behavior of the proposed gradient flows, and their robustness to additive disturbances for a range of functions obeying strong convexity, strict convexity, and possibly nonconvexity but satisfying the Polyak-Łojasiewicz inequality. We also show that the regret bound on the convergence rate is constant by virtue of the fixed-time convergence. The hyperparameters have intuitive interpretations and can be tuned to fit the requirements on the desired convergence rates. We validate the accelerated convergence properties of the proposed schemes on a range of numerical examples against the state-of-the-art optimization algorithms. Our work provides insights on developing novel optimization algorithms via discretization of continuous-time flows.