132 research outputs found

    MAP inference via Block-Coordinate Frank-Wolfe Algorithm

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    We present a new proximal bundle method for Maximum-A-Posteriori (MAP) inference in structured energy minimization problems. The method optimizes a Lagrangean relaxation of the original energy minimization problem using a multi plane block-coordinate Frank-Wolfe method that takes advantage of the specific structure of the Lagrangean decomposition. We show empirically that our method outperforms state-of-the-art Lagrangean decomposition based algorithms on some challenging Markov Random Field, multi-label discrete tomography and graph matching problems

    Barrier Frank-Wolfe for Marginal Inference

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    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

    Structured Prediction Problem Archive

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    Structured prediction problems are one of the fundamental tools in machinelearning. In order to facilitate algorithm development for their numericalsolution, we collect in one place a large number of datasets in easy to readformats for a diverse set of problem classes. We provide archival links todatasets, description of the considered problems and problem formats, and ashort summary of problem characteristics including size, number of instancesetc. For reference we also give a non-exhaustive selection of algorithmsproposed in the literature for their solution. We hope that this centralrepository will make benchmarking and comparison to established works easier.We welcome submission of interesting new datasets and algorithms for inclusionin our archive.<br
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