scholarly journals Worst-case complexity of cyclic coordinate descent: $$O(n^2)$$ gap with randomized version

Author(s):  
Ruoyu Sun ◽  
Yinyu Ye
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Dodangeh ◽  
L. N. Vicente ◽  
Z. Zhang

Author(s):  
Federico Della Croce ◽  
Bruno Escoffier ◽  
Marcin Kamiski ◽  
Vangelis Th. Paschos

2018 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 1246-1275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ching-pei Lee ◽  
Stephen J Wright

Abstract Variants of the coordinate descent approach for minimizing a nonlinear function are distinguished in part by the order in which coordinates are considered for relaxation. Three common orderings are cyclic (CCD), in which we cycle through the components of $x$ in order; randomized (RCD), in which the component to update is selected randomly and independently at each iteration; and random-permutations cyclic (RPCD), which differs from CCD only in that a random permutation is applied to the variables at the start of each cycle. Known convergence guarantees are weaker for CCD and RPCD than for RCD, though in most practical cases, computational performance is similar among all these variants. There is a certain type of quadratic function for which CCD is significantly slower than for RCD; a recent paper by Sun & Ye (2016, Worst-case complexity of cyclic coordinate descent: $O(n^2)$ gap with randomized version. Technical Report. Stanford, CA: Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University. arXiv:1604.07130) has explored the poor behavior of CCD on functions of this type. The RPCD approach performs well on these functions, even better than RCD in a certain regime. This paper explains the good behavior of RPCD with a tight analysis.


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