97,453 research outputs found
Nonnegative Matrix Inequalities and their Application to Nonconvex Power Control Optimization
Maximizing the sum rates in a multiuser Gaussian channel by power control is a nonconvex NP-hard problem that finds engineering application in code division multiple access (CDMA) wireless communication network. In this paper, we extend and apply several fundamental nonnegative matrix inequalities initiated by Friedland and Karlin in a 1975 paper to solve this nonconvex power control optimization problem. Leveraging tools such as the Perron–Frobenius theorem in nonnegative matrix theory, we (1) show that this problem in the power domain can be reformulated as an equivalent convex maximization problem over a closed unbounded convex set in the logarithmic signal-to-interference-noise ratio domain, (2) propose two relaxation techniques that utilize the reformulation problem structure and convexification by Lagrange dual relaxation to compute progressively tight bounds, and (3) propose a global optimization algorithm with ϵ-suboptimality to compute the optimal power control allocation. A byproduct of our analysis is the application of Friedland–Karlin inequalities to inverse problems in nonnegative matrix theory
On Correcting Inputs: Inverse Optimization for Online Structured Prediction
Algorithm designers typically assume that the input data is correct, and then
proceed to find "optimal" or "sub-optimal" solutions using this input data.
However this assumption of correct data does not always hold in practice,
especially in the context of online learning systems where the objective is to
learn appropriate feature weights given some training samples. Such scenarios
necessitate the study of inverse optimization problems where one is given an
input instance as well as a desired output and the task is to adjust the input
data so that the given output is indeed optimal. Motivated by learning
structured prediction models, in this paper we consider inverse optimization
with a margin, i.e., we require the given output to be better than all other
feasible outputs by a desired margin. We consider such inverse optimization
problems for maximum weight matroid basis, matroid intersection, perfect
matchings, minimum cost maximum flows, and shortest paths and derive the first
known results for such problems with a non-zero margin. The effectiveness of
these algorithmic approaches to online learning for structured prediction is
also discussed.Comment: Conference version to appear in FSTTCS, 201
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