Oliver Hinder

OC
h-index26
9papers
316citations
Novelty51%
AI Score36

9 Papers

LGFeb 8, 2023Code
DoG is SGD's Best Friend: A Parameter-Free Dynamic Step Size Schedule

Maor Ivgi, Oliver Hinder, Yair Carmon

We propose a tuning-free dynamic SGD step size formula, which we call Distance over Gradients (DoG). The DoG step sizes depend on simple empirical quantities (distance from the initial point and norms of gradients) and have no ``learning rate'' parameter. Theoretically, we show that a slight variation of the DoG formula enjoys strong parameter-free convergence guarantees for stochastic convex optimization assuming only \emph{locally bounded} stochastic gradients. Empirically, we consider a broad range of vision and language transfer learning tasks, and show that DoG's performance is close to that of SGD with tuned learning rate. We also propose a per-layer variant of DoG that generally outperforms tuned SGD, approaching the performance of tuned Adam. A PyTorch implementation is available at https://github.com/formll/dog

OCSep 2, 2022
Optimal Diagonal Preconditioning

Zhaonan Qu, Wenzhi Gao, Oliver Hinder et al.

Preconditioning has long been a staple technique in optimization, often applied to reduce the condition number of a matrix and speed up the convergence of algorithms. Although there are many popular preconditioning techniques in practice, most lack guarantees on reductions in condition number. Moreover, the degree to which we can improve over existing heuristic preconditioners remains an important practical question. In this paper, we study the problem of optimal diagonal preconditioning that achieves maximal reduction in the condition number of any full-rank matrix by scaling its rows and/or columns. We first reformulate the problem as a quasi-convex problem and provide a simple algorithm based on bisection. Then we develop an interior point algorithm with $O(\log(1/ε))$ iteration complexity, where each iteration consists of a Newton update based on the Nesterov-Todd direction. Next, we specialize to one-sided optimal diagonal preconditioning problems, and demonstrate that they can be formulated as standard dual SDP problems. We then develop efficient customized solvers and study the empirical performance of our optimal diagonal preconditioning procedures through extensive experiments on large matrices. Our findings suggest that optimal diagonal preconditioners can significantly improve upon existing heuristics-based diagonal preconditioners at reducing condition numbers and speeding up iterative methods. Moreover, our implementation of customized solvers, combined with a random row/column sampling step, can find near-optimal diagonal preconditioners for matrices up to size 200,000 in reasonable time, demonstrating their practical appeal.

OCMay 4, 2022
Making SGD Parameter-Free

Yair Carmon, Oliver Hinder

We develop an algorithm for parameter-free stochastic convex optimization (SCO) whose rate of convergence is only a double-logarithmic factor larger than the optimal rate for the corresponding known-parameter setting. In contrast, the best previously known rates for parameter-free SCO are based on online parameter-free regret bounds, which contain unavoidable excess logarithmic terms compared to their known-parameter counterparts. Our algorithm is conceptually simple, has high-probability guarantees, and is also partially adaptive to unknown gradient norms, smoothness, and strong convexity. At the heart of our results is a novel parameter-free certificate for SGD step size choice, and a time-uniform concentration result that assumes no a-priori bounds on SGD iterates.

LGOct 29, 2023
Datasets and Benchmarks for Nanophotonic Structure and Parametric Design Simulations

Jungtaek Kim, Mingxuan Li, Oliver Hinder et al.

Nanophotonic structures have versatile applications including solar cells, anti-reflective coatings, electromagnetic interference shielding, optical filters, and light emitting diodes. To design and understand these nanophotonic structures, electrodynamic simulations are essential. These simulations enable us to model electromagnetic fields over time and calculate optical properties. In this work, we introduce frameworks and benchmarks to evaluate nanophotonic structures in the context of parametric structure design problems. The benchmarks are instrumental in assessing the performance of optimization algorithms and identifying an optimal structure based on target optical properties. Moreover, we explore the impact of varying grid sizes in electrodynamic simulations, shedding light on how evaluation fidelity can be strategically leveraged in enhancing structure designs.

LGMar 31, 2024
Accelerated Parameter-Free Stochastic Optimization

Itai Kreisler, Maor Ivgi, Oliver Hinder et al.

We propose a method that achieves near-optimal rates for smooth stochastic convex optimization and requires essentially no prior knowledge of problem parameters. This improves on prior work which requires knowing at least the initial distance to optimality d0. Our method, U-DoG, combines UniXGrad (Kavis et al., 2019) and DoG (Ivgi et al., 2023) with novel iterate stabilization techniques. It requires only loose bounds on d0 and the noise magnitude, provides high probability guarantees under sub-Gaussian noise, and is also near-optimal in the non-smooth case. Our experiments show consistent, strong performance on convex problems and mixed results on neural network training.

OCFeb 16, 2024
The Price of Adaptivity in Stochastic Convex Optimization

Yair Carmon, Oliver Hinder

We prove impossibility results for adaptivity in non-smooth stochastic convex optimization. Given a set of problem parameters we wish to adapt to, we define a "price of adaptivity" (PoA) that, roughly speaking, measures the multiplicative increase in suboptimality due to uncertainty in these parameters. When the initial distance to the optimum is unknown but a gradient norm bound is known, we show that the PoA is at least logarithmic for expected suboptimality, and double-logarithmic for median suboptimality. When there is uncertainty in both distance and gradient norm, we show that the PoA must be polynomial in the level of uncertainty. Our lower bounds nearly match existing upper bounds, and establish that there is no parameter-free lunch. En route, we also establish tight upper and lower bounds for (known-parameter) high-probability stochastic convex optimization with heavy-tailed and bounded noise, respectively.

LGJun 12, 2025
The Sample Complexity of Parameter-Free Stochastic Convex Optimization

Jared Lawrence, Ari Kalinsky, Hannah Bradfield et al.

We study the sample complexity of stochastic convex optimization when problem parameters, e.g., the distance to optimality, are unknown. We pursue two strategies. First, we develop a reliable model selection method that avoids overfitting the validation set. This method allows us to generically tune the learning rate of stochastic optimization methods to match the optimal known-parameter sample complexity up to $\log\log$ factors. Second, we develop a regularization-based method that is specialized to the case that only the distance to optimality is unknown. This method provides perfect adaptability to unknown distance to optimality, demonstrating a separation between the sample and computational complexity of parameter-free stochastic convex optimization. Combining these two methods allows us to simultaneously adapt to multiple problem structures. Experiments performing few-shot learning on CIFAR-10 by fine-tuning CLIP models and prompt engineering Gemini to count shapes indicate that our reliable model selection method can help mitigate overfitting to small validation sets.

OCOct 27, 2020
An efficient nonconvex reformulation of stagewise convex optimization problems

Rudy Bunel, Oliver Hinder, Srinadh Bhojanapalli et al.

Convex optimization problems with staged structure appear in several contexts, including optimal control, verification of deep neural networks, and isotonic regression. Off-the-shelf solvers can solve these problems but may scale poorly. We develop a nonconvex reformulation designed to exploit this staged structure. Our reformulation has only simple bound constraints, enabling solution via projected gradient methods and their accelerated variants. The method automatically generates a sequence of primal and dual feasible solutions to the original convex problem, making optimality certification easy. We establish theoretical properties of the nonconvex formulation, showing that it is (almost) free of spurious local minima and has the same global optimum as the convex problem. We modify PGD to avoid spurious local minimizers so it always converges to the global minimizer. For neural network verification, our approach obtains small duality gaps in only a few gradient steps. Consequently, it can quickly solve large-scale verification problems faster than both off-the-shelf and specialized solvers.

OCJun 27, 2019
Near-Optimal Methods for Minimizing Star-Convex Functions and Beyond

Oliver Hinder, Aaron Sidford, Nimit S. Sohoni

In this paper, we provide near-optimal accelerated first-order methods for minimizing a broad class of smooth nonconvex functions that are strictly unimodal on all lines through a minimizer. This function class, which we call the class of smooth quasar-convex functions, is parameterized by a constant $γ\in (0,1]$, where $γ= 1$ encompasses the classes of smooth convex and star-convex functions, and smaller values of $γ$ indicate that the function can be "more nonconvex." We develop a variant of accelerated gradient descent that computes an $ε$-approximate minimizer of a smooth $γ$-quasar-convex function with at most $O(γ^{-1} ε^{-1/2} \log(γ^{-1} ε^{-1}))$ total function and gradient evaluations. We also derive a lower bound of $Ω(γ^{-1} ε^{-1/2})$ on the worst-case number of gradient evaluations required by any deterministic first-order method, showing that, up to a logarithmic factor, no deterministic first-order method can improve upon ours.