Recasts sampling-based nonconvex optimization as smoothed gradient descent to obtain non-asymptotic convergence guarantees and introduces the DIDA annealed algorithm that converges to the global optimum.
Optimal rates for zero-order convex optimization: the power of two function evaluations
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abstract
We consider derivative-free algorithms for stochastic and non-stochastic convex optimization problems that use only function values rather than gradients. Focusing on non-asymptotic bounds on convergence rates, we show that if pairs of function values are available, algorithms for $d$-dimensional optimization that use gradient estimates based on random perturbations suffer a factor of at most $\sqrt{d}$ in convergence rate over traditional stochastic gradient methods. We establish such results for both smooth and non-smooth cases, sharpening previous analyses that suggested a worse dimension dependence, and extend our results to the case of multiple ($m \ge 2$) evaluations. We complement our algorithmic development with information-theoretic lower bounds on the minimax convergence rate of such problems, establishing the sharpness of our achievable results up to constant (sometimes logarithmic) factors.
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Global Convergence of Sampling-Based Nonconvex Optimization through Diffusion-Style Smoothing
Recasts sampling-based nonconvex optimization as smoothed gradient descent to obtain non-asymptotic convergence guarantees and introduces the DIDA annealed algorithm that converges to the global optimum.