Abstract

We consider a long-term average profit–maximizing admission control problem in an M/M/1 queuing system with unknown service and arrival rates. With a fixed reward collected upon service completion and a cost per unit of time enforced on customers waiting in the queue, a dispatcher decides upon arrivals whether to admit the arriving customer or not based on the full history of observations of the queue length of the system. Naor [Naor P (1969) The regulation of queue size by levying tolls. Econometrica 37(1):15–24] shows that, if all the parameters of the model are known, then it is optimal to use a static threshold policy: admit if the queue length is less than a predetermined threshold and otherwise not. We propose a learning-based dispatching algorithm and characterize its regret with respect to optimal dispatch policies for the full-information model of Naor [Naor P (1969) The regulation of queue size by levying tolls. Econometrica 37(1):15–24]. We show that the algorithm achieves an O(1) regret when all optimal thresholds with full information are nonzero and achieves an [Formula: see text] regret for any specified [Formula: see text] in the case that an optimal threshold with full information is 0 (i.e., an optimal policy is to reject all arrivals), where N is the number of arrivals. Funding: A. Cohen is partially supported by the National Science Foundation [Grant DMS-2006305]. V. Subramanian is supported in part by the NSF [Grants CCF-2008130, ECCS-2038416, CNS-1955777, and CMMI-2240981].

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