Abstract

Suppose we are given a submodular function $f$ over a set of elements, and we want to maximize its value subject to certain constraints. Good approximation algorithms are known for such problems under both monotone and non-monotone submodular functions. We consider these problems in a stochastic setting, where elements are not all active and we can only get value from active elements. Each element $e$ is active independently with some known probability $p_e$, but we don't know the element's status \emph{a priori}. We find it out only when we \emph{probe} the element $e$---probing reveals whether it's active or not, whereafter we can use this information to decide which other elements to probe. Eventually, if we have a probed set $S$ and a subset $\text{active}(S)$ of active elements in $S$, we can pick any $T \subseteq \text{active}(S)$ and get value $f(T)$. Moreover, the sequence of elements we probe must satisfy a given \emph{prefix-closed constraint}---e.g., these may be given by a matroid, or an orienteering constraint, or deadline, or precedence constraint, or an arbitrary downward-closed constraint---if we can probe some sequence of elements we can probe any prefix of it. What is a good strategy to probe elements to maximize the expected value? In this paper we study the gap between adaptive and non-adaptive strategies for $f$ being a submodular or a fractionally subadditive (XOS) function. If this gap is small, we can focus on finding good non-adaptive strategies instead, which are easier to find as well as to represent. We show that the adaptivity gap is a constant for monotone and non-monotone submodular functions, and logarithmic for XOS functions of small \emph{width}. These bounds are nearly tight. Our techniques show new ways of arguing about the optimal adaptive decision tree for stochastic problems.

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