1,473 research outputs found
Playing with Duality: An Overview of Recent Primal-Dual Approaches for Solving Large-Scale Optimization Problems
Optimization methods are at the core of many problems in signal/image
processing, computer vision, and machine learning. For a long time, it has been
recognized that looking at the dual of an optimization problem may drastically
simplify its solution. Deriving efficient strategies which jointly brings into
play the primal and the dual problems is however a more recent idea which has
generated many important new contributions in the last years. These novel
developments are grounded on recent advances in convex analysis, discrete
optimization, parallel processing, and non-smooth optimization with emphasis on
sparsity issues. In this paper, we aim at presenting the principles of
primal-dual approaches, while giving an overview of numerical methods which
have been proposed in different contexts. We show the benefits which can be
drawn from primal-dual algorithms both for solving large-scale convex
optimization problems and discrete ones, and we provide various application
examples to illustrate their usefulness
Approximating k-Forest with Resource Augmentation: A Primal-Dual Approach
In this paper, we study the -forest problem in the model of resource
augmentation. In the -forest problem, given an edge-weighted graph ,
a parameter , and a set of demand pairs , the
objective is to construct a minimum-cost subgraph that connects at least
demands. The problem is hard to approximate---the best-known approximation
ratio is . Furthermore, -forest is as hard to
approximate as the notoriously-hard densest -subgraph problem.
While the -forest problem is hard to approximate in the worst-case, we
show that with the use of resource augmentation, we can efficiently approximate
it up to a constant factor.
First, we restate the problem in terms of the number of demands that are {\em
not} connected. In particular, the objective of the -forest problem can be
viewed as to remove at most demands and find a minimum-cost subgraph that
connects the remaining demands. We use this perspective of the problem to
explain the performance of our algorithm (in terms of the augmentation) in a
more intuitive way.
Specifically, we present a polynomial-time algorithm for the -forest
problem that, for every , removes at most demands and has
cost no more than times the cost of an optimal algorithm
that removes at most demands
A new approximation algorithm for the multilevel facility location problem
In this paper we propose a new integer programming formulation for the multi-level facility location problem and a novel 3-approximation algorithm based on LP rounding. The linear program we are using has a polynomial number of variables and constraints, being thus more efficient than the one commonly used in the approximation algorithms for this type of problems
Approximation algorithms for node-weighted prize-collecting Steiner tree problems on planar graphs
We study the prize-collecting version of the Node-weighted Steiner Tree
problem (NWPCST) restricted to planar graphs. We give a new primal-dual
Lagrangian-multiplier-preserving (LMP) 3-approximation algorithm for planar
NWPCST. We then show a ()-approximation which establishes a
new best approximation guarantee for planar NWPCST. This is done by combining
our LMP algorithm with a threshold rounding technique and utilizing the
2.4-approximation of Berman and Yaroslavtsev for the version without penalties.
We also give a primal-dual 4-approximation algorithm for the more general
forest version using techniques introduced by Hajiaghay and Jain
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