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In this paper, we mainly study the gradient based Jacobi-type algorithms to maximize two classes of homogeneous polynomials with orthogonality constraints, and establish their convergence properties. For the first class of homogeneous polynomials subject to a constraint on a Stiefel manifold, we reformulate it as an optimization problem on a unitary group, which makes it possible to apply the gradient based Jacobi-type (Jacobi-G) algorithm. Then, if the subproblem can be always represented as a quadratic form, we establish the global convergence of Jacobi-G under any one of the three conditions (A1), (A2) and (A3). The convergence result for (A1) is an easy extension of the result in [Usevich et al. SIOPT 2020], while (A2) and (A3) are two new ones. This algorithm and the convergence properties apply to the well-known joint approximate symmetric tensor diagonalization and joint approximate symmetric trace maximization. For the second class of homogeneous polynomials subject to constraints on the product of Stiefel manifolds, we similarly reformulate it as an optimization problem on the product of unitary groups, and then develop a new gradient based multi-block Jacobi-type (Jacobi-MG) algorithm to solve it. We similarly establish the global convergence of Jacobi-MG under any one of the three conditions (A1), (A2) and (A3), if the subproblem can be always represented as a quadratic form. This algorithm and the convergence properties apply to the well-known joint approximate tensor diagonalization and joint approximate tensor compression. As the proximal variants of Jacobi-G and Jacobi-MG, we also propose the Jacobi-GP and Jacobi-MGP algorithms, and establish their global convergence without any further condition. Some numerical results are provided indicating the efficiency of the proposed algorithms.

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We study a class of algorithms for solving bilevel optimization problems in both stochastic and deterministic settings when the inner-level objective is strongly convex. Specifically, we consider algorithms based on inexact implicit differentiation and we exploit a warm-start strategy to amortize the estimation of the exact gradient. We then introduce a unified theoretical framework inspired by the study of singularly perturbed systems (Habets, 1974) to analyze such amortized algorithms. By using this framework, our analysis shows these algorithms to match the computational complexity of oracle methods that have access to an unbiased estimate of the gradient, thus outperforming many existing results for bilevel optimization. We illustrate these findings on synthetic experiments and demonstrate the efficiency of these algorithms on hyper-parameter optimization experiments involving several thousands of variables.

We study the Maximum Independent Set (MIS) problem under the notion of stability introduced by Bilu and Linial (2010): a weighted instance of MIS is $\gamma$-stable if it has a unique optimal solution that remains the unique optimum under multiplicative perturbations of the weights by a factor of at most $\gamma\geq 1$. The goal then is to efficiently recover the unique optimal solution. In this work, we solve stable instances of MIS on several graphs classes: we solve $\widetilde{O}(\Delta/\sqrt{\log \Delta})$-stable instances on graphs of maximum degree $\Delta$, $(k - 1)$-stable instances on $k$-colorable graphs and $(1 + \varepsilon)$-stable instances on planar graphs. For general graphs, we present a strong lower bound showing that there are no efficient algorithms for $O(n^{\frac{1}{2} - \varepsilon})$-stable instances of MIS, assuming the planted clique conjecture. We also give an algorithm for $(\varepsilon n)$-stable instances. As a by-product of our techniques, we give algorithms and lower bounds for stable instances of Node Multiway Cut. Furthermore, we prove a general result showing that the integrality gap of convex relaxations of several maximization problems reduces dramatically on stable instances. Moreover, we initiate the study of certified algorithms, a notion recently introduced by Makarychev and Makarychev (2018), which is a class of $\gamma$-approximation algorithms that satisfy one crucial property: the solution returned is optimal for a perturbation of the original instance. We obtain $\Delta$-certified algorithms for MIS on graphs of maximum degree $\Delta$, and $(1+\varepsilon)$-certified algorithms on planar graphs. Finally, we analyze the algorithm of Berman and Furer (1994) and prove that it is a $\left(\frac{\Delta + 1}{3} + \varepsilon\right)$-certified algorithm for MIS on graphs of maximum degree $\Delta$ where all weights are equal to 1.

In this paper a class of optimization problems with uncertain linear constraints is discussed. It is assumed that the constraint coefficients are random vectors whose probability distributions are only partially known. Possibility theory is used to model the imprecise probabilities. In one of the interpretations, a possibility distribution (a membership function of a fuzzy set) in the set of coefficient realizations induces a necessity measure, which in turn defines a family of probability distributions in this set. The distributionally robust approach is then used to transform the imprecise constraints into deterministic counterparts. Namely, the uncertain left-had side of each constraint is replaced with the expected value with respect to the worst probability distribution that can occur. It is shown how to represent the resulting problem by using linear or second order cone constraints. This leads to problems which are computationally tractable for a wide class of optimization models, in particular for linear programming.

Determinantal Point Process (DPPs) are statistical models for repulsive point patterns. Both sampling and inference are tractable for DPPs, a rare feature among models with negative dependence that explains their popularity in machine learning and spatial statistics. Parametric and nonparametric inference methods have been proposed in the finite case, i.e. when the point patterns live in a finite ground set. In the continuous case, only parametric methods have been investigated, while nonparametric maximum likelihood for DPPs -- an optimization problem over trace-class operators -- has remained an open question. In this paper, we show that a restricted version of this maximum likelihood (MLE) problem falls within the scope of a recent representer theorem for nonnegative functions in an RKHS. This leads to a finite-dimensional problem, with strong statistical ties to the original MLE. Moreover, we propose, analyze, and demonstrate a fixed point algorithm to solve this finite-dimensional problem. Finally, we also provide a controlled estimate of the correlation kernel of the DPP, thus providing more interpretability.

A common approach to tackle a combinatorial optimization problem is to first solve a continuous relaxation and then round the obtained fractional solution. For the latter, the framework of contention resolution schemes (or CR schemes), introduced by Chekuri, Vondrak, and Zenklusen, is a general and successful tool. A CR scheme takes a fractional point $x$ in a relaxation polytope, rounds each coordinate $x_i$ independently to get a possibly non-feasible set, and then drops some elements in order to satisfy the independence constraints. Intuitively, a CR scheme is $c$-balanced if every element $i$ is selected with probability at least $c \cdot x_i$. It is known that general matroids admit a $(1-1/e)$-balanced CR scheme, and that this is (asymptotically) optimal. This is in particular true for the special case of uniform matroids of rank one. In this work, we provide a simple and explicit monotone CR scheme with a balancedness of $1 - \binom{n}{k}\:\left(1-\frac{k}{n}\right)^{n+1-k}\:\left(\frac{k}{n}\right)^k$, and show that this is optimal. As $n$ grows, this expression converges from above to $1 - e^{-k}k^k/k!$. While this asymptotic bound can be obtained by combining previously known results, these require defining an exponential-sized linear program, as well as using random sampling and the ellipsoid algorithm. Our procedure, on the other hand, has the advantage of being simple and explicit. Moreover, this scheme generalizes into an optimal CR scheme for partition matroids.

This paper studies distributed binary test of statistical independence under communication (information bits) constraints. While testing independence is very relevant in various applications, distributed independence test is particularly useful for event detection in sensor networks where data correlation often occurs among observations of devices in the presence of a signal of interest. By focusing on the case of two devices because of their tractability, we begin by investigating conditions on Type I error probability restrictions under which the minimum Type II error admits an exponential behavior with the sample size. Then, we study the finite sample-size regime of this problem. We derive new upper and lower bounds for the gap between the minimum Type II error and its exponential approximation under different setups, including restrictions imposed on the vanishing Type I error probability. Our theoretical results shed light on the sample-size regimes at which approximations of the Type II error probability via error exponents became informative enough in the sense of predicting well the actual error probability. We finally discuss an application of our results where the gap is evaluated numerically, and we show that exponential approximations are not only tractable but also a valuable proxy for the Type II probability of error in the finite-length regime.

Despite their overwhelming capacity to overfit, deep neural networks trained by specific optimization algorithms tend to generalize well to unseen data. Recently, researchers explained it by investigating the implicit regularization effect of optimization algorithms. A remarkable progress is the work (Lyu&Li, 2019), which proves gradient descent (GD) maximizes the margin of homogeneous deep neural networks. Except GD, adaptive algorithms such as AdaGrad, RMSProp and Adam are popular owing to their rapid training process. However, theoretical guarantee for the generalization of adaptive optimization algorithms is still lacking. In this paper, we study the implicit regularization of adaptive optimization algorithms when they are optimizing the logistic loss on homogeneous deep neural networks. We prove that adaptive algorithms that adopt exponential moving average strategy in conditioner (such as Adam and RMSProp) can maximize the margin of the neural network, while AdaGrad that directly sums historical squared gradients in conditioner can not. It indicates superiority on generalization of exponential moving average strategy in the design of the conditioner. Technically, we provide a unified framework to analyze convergent direction of adaptive optimization algorithms by constructing novel adaptive gradient flow and surrogate margin. Our experiments can well support the theoretical findings on convergent direction of adaptive optimization algorithms.

In this work, we consider the distributed optimization of non-smooth convex functions using a network of computing units. We investigate this problem under two regularity assumptions: (1) the Lipschitz continuity of the global objective function, and (2) the Lipschitz continuity of local individual functions. Under the local regularity assumption, we provide the first optimal first-order decentralized algorithm called multi-step primal-dual (MSPD) and its corresponding optimal convergence rate. A notable aspect of this result is that, for non-smooth functions, while the dominant term of the error is in $O(1/\sqrt{t})$, the structure of the communication network only impacts a second-order term in $O(1/t)$, where $t$ is time. In other words, the error due to limits in communication resources decreases at a fast rate even in the case of non-strongly-convex objective functions. Under the global regularity assumption, we provide a simple yet efficient algorithm called distributed randomized smoothing (DRS) based on a local smoothing of the objective function, and show that DRS is within a $d^{1/4}$ multiplicative factor of the optimal convergence rate, where $d$ is the underlying dimension.

Many resource allocation problems in the cloud can be described as a basic Virtual Network Embedding Problem (VNEP): finding mappings of request graphs (describing the workloads) onto a substrate graph (describing the physical infrastructure). In the offline setting, the two natural objectives are profit maximization, i.e., embedding a maximal number of request graphs subject to the resource constraints, and cost minimization, i.e., embedding all requests at minimal overall cost. The VNEP can be seen as a generalization of classic routing and call admission problems, in which requests are arbitrary graphs whose communication endpoints are not fixed. Due to its applications, the problem has been studied intensively in the networking community. However, the underlying algorithmic problem is hardly understood. This paper presents the first fixed-parameter tractable approximation algorithms for the VNEP. Our algorithms are based on randomized rounding. Due to the flexible mapping options and the arbitrary request graph topologies, we show that a novel linear program formulation is required. Only using this novel formulation the computation of convex combinations of valid mappings is enabled, as the formulation needs to account for the structure of the request graphs. Accordingly, to capture the structure of request graphs, we introduce the graph-theoretic notion of extraction orders and extraction width and show that our algorithms have exponential runtime in the request graphs' maximal width. Hence, for request graphs of fixed extraction width, we obtain the first polynomial-time approximations. Studying the new notion of extraction orders we show that (i) computing extraction orders of minimal width is NP-hard and (ii) that computing decomposable LP solutions is in general NP-hard, even when restricting request graphs to planar ones.

In this paper, we study the optimal convergence rate for distributed convex optimization problems in networks. We model the communication restrictions imposed by the network as a set of affine constraints and provide optimal complexity bounds for four different setups, namely: the function $F(\xb) \triangleq \sum_{i=1}^{m}f_i(\xb)$ is strongly convex and smooth, either strongly convex or smooth or just convex. Our results show that Nesterov's accelerated gradient descent on the dual problem can be executed in a distributed manner and obtains the same optimal rates as in the centralized version of the problem (up to constant or logarithmic factors) with an additional cost related to the spectral gap of the interaction matrix. Finally, we discuss some extensions to the proposed setup such as proximal friendly functions, time-varying graphs, improvement of the condition numbers.

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