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Schedules and Prioritization: A Behavioral Foundation for Multi-Armed Bandits and Stopping Problems

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  • Jaden Yang Chen
  • Can Urgun

Abstract

Bandit models typically begin with arms, states, rewards, and transition rules. This paper instead begins with preferences over stopped local contingent schedules: possible unfoldings of a responsibility, project, experiment, or opportunity in its own local time. Behavioral axioms on single schedules characterize a generalized stopping representation with current utility, local discounting, and a broad continuation aggregator. A common-tail compensation axiom then allows calendar time to be priced across schedules. Imposing a tight elapsed-calendar constraint generates a rested generalized bandit and yields index optimality: the index is the shadow price of advancing a local clock. Expected-utility, learning, robust, rank-dependent, Choquet, and Pandora models arise as special cases.

Suggested Citation

  • Jaden Yang Chen & Can Urgun, 2026. "Schedules and Prioritization: A Behavioral Foundation for Multi-Armed Bandits and Stopping Problems," Papers 2606.12044, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2606.12044
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.12044
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