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Research PaperResearchia:202601.1238c190

The Secretary Problem with Predictions and a Chosen Order

Helia Karisani

Abstract

We study a learning-augmented variant of the secretary problem, recently introduced by Fujii and Yoshida (2023), in which the decision-maker has access to machine-learned predictions of candidate values. The central challenge is to balance consistency and robustness: when predictions are accurate, the algorithm should select a near-optimal secretary, while under inaccurate predictions it should still guarantee a bounded competitive ratio. We consider both the classical Random Order Secretary Pro...

Submitted: January 12, 2026Subjects: Machine Learning; Machine Learning

Description / Details

We study a learning-augmented variant of the secretary problem, recently introduced by Fujii and Yoshida (2023), in which the decision-maker has access to machine-learned predictions of candidate values. The central challenge is to balance consistency and robustness: when predictions are accurate, the algorithm should select a near-optimal secretary, while under inaccurate predictions it should still guarantee a bounded competitive ratio. We consider both the classical Random Order Secretary Problem (ROSP), where candidates arrive in a uniformly random order, and a more natural learning-augmented model in which the decision-maker may choose the arrival order based on predicted values. We call this model the Chosen Order Secretary Problem (COSP), capturing scenarios such as interview schedules set in advance. We propose a new randomized algorithm applicable to both ROSP and COSP. Our method switches from fully trusting predictions to a threshold-based rule once a large prediction deviation is detected. Let ε[0,1]ε\in [0,1] denote the maximum multiplicative prediction error. For ROSP, our algorithm achieves a competitive ratio of max{0.221,(1ε)/(1+ε)}\max\{0.221, (1-ε)/(1+ε)\}, improving upon the prior bound of max{0.215,(1ε)/(1+ε)}\max\{0.215, (1-ε)/(1+ε)\}. For COSP, we achieve max{0.262,(1ε)/(1+ε)}\max\{0.262, (1-ε)/(1+ε)\}, surpassing the 0.250.25 worst-case bound for prior approaches and moving closer to the classical secretary benchmark of 1/e0.3681/e \approx 0.368. These results highlight the benefit of combining predictions with arrival-order control in online decision-making.

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Date:
Jan 12, 2026
Topic:
Machine Learning
Area:
Machine Learning
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