96 research outputs found
Getting Feasible Variable Estimates From Infeasible Ones: MRF Local Polytope Study
This paper proposes a method for construction of approximate feasible primal
solutions from dual ones for large-scale optimization problems possessing
certain separability properties. Whereas infeasible primal estimates can
typically be produced from (sub-)gradients of the dual function, it is often
not easy to project them to the primal feasible set, since the projection
itself has a complexity comparable to the complexity of the initial problem. We
propose an alternative efficient method to obtain feasibility and show that its
properties influencing the convergence to the optimum are similar to the
properties of the Euclidean projection. We apply our method to the local
polytope relaxation of inference problems for Markov Random Fields and
demonstrate its superiority over existing methods.Comment: 20 page, 4 figure
Barrier Frank-Wolfe for Marginal Inference
We introduce a globally-convergent algorithm for optimizing the
tree-reweighted (TRW) variational objective over the marginal polytope. The
algorithm is based on the conditional gradient method (Frank-Wolfe) and moves
pseudomarginals within the marginal polytope through repeated maximum a
posteriori (MAP) calls. This modular structure enables us to leverage black-box
MAP solvers (both exact and approximate) for variational inference, and obtains
more accurate results than tree-reweighted algorithms that optimize over the
local consistency relaxation. Theoretically, we bound the sub-optimality for
the proposed algorithm despite the TRW objective having unbounded gradients at
the boundary of the marginal polytope. Empirically, we demonstrate the
increased quality of results found by tightening the relaxation over the
marginal polytope as well as the spanning tree polytope on synthetic and
real-world instances.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figures, To appear in Neural Information Processing
Systems (NIPS) 2015, Corrected reference and cleaned up bibliograph
A dual ascent framework for Lagrangean decomposition of combinatorial problems
We propose a general dual ascent framework for Lagrangean decomposition of combinatorial problems. Although methods of this type have shown their efficiency for a number of problems, so far there was no general algorithm applicable to multiple problem types. In this work, we propose such a general algorithm. It depends on several parameters, which can be used to optimize its performance in each particular setting. We demonstrate efficacy of our method on graph matching and multicut problems, where it outperforms state-of-the-art solvers including those based on subgradient optimization and off-the-shelf linear programming solvers
A dual ascent framework for Lagrangean decomposition of combinatorial problems
We propose a general dual ascent framework for Lagrangean decomposition of combinatorial problems. Although methods of this type have shown their efficiency for a number of problems, so far there was no general algorithm applicable to multiple problem types. In this work, we propose such a general algorithm. It depends on several parameters, which can be used to optimize its performance in each particular setting. We demonstrate efficacy of our method on graph matching and multicut problems, where it outperforms state-of-the-art solvers including those based on subgradient optimization and off-the-shelf linear programming solvers
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