Frank Schöpfer

3papers

3 Papers

NAFeb 12, 2016
A CG-type method in Banach spaces with an application to computerized tomography

Frederik Heber, Frank Schöpfer, Thomas Schuster

Conjugate Gradient (CG) methods are one of the most effective iterative methods to solve linear equations in Hilbert spaces. So far, they have been inherently bound to these spaces since they make use of the inner product structure. In more general Banach spaces one of the most prominent iterative solvers are Landweber-type methods that essentially resemble the Steepest Descent method applied to the normal equation. More advanced are subspace methods that take up the idea of a Krylov-type search space, wherein an optimal solution is sought. However, they do not share the conjugacy property with CG methods. In this article we propose that the Sequential Subspace Optimization (SESOP) method can be considered as an extension of CG methods to Banach spaces. We employ metric projections to orthogonalize the current search direction with respect to the search space from the last iteration. For the l2-space our method then exactly coincides with the Polak-Ribière type of the CG method when applied to the normal equation. We show that such an orthogonalized search space still leads to weak convergence of the subspace method. Moreover, numerical experiments on a random matrix toy problem and 2D computerized tomography on lp-spaces show superior convergence properties over all p compared to non-orthogonalized search spaces. This especially holds for lp-spaces with small p. We see that the closer we are to an l2-space, the more we recover of the conjugacy property that holds in these spaces, i. e., as expected, the more the convergence behaves independently of the size of the truncated search space.

OCMar 28, 2014
A sparse Kaczmarz solver and a linearized Bregman method for online compressed sensing

Dirk A. Lorenz, Stephan Wenger, Frank Schöpfer et al.

An algorithmic framework to compute sparse or minimal-TV solutions of linear systems is proposed. The framework includes both the Kaczmarz method and the linearized Bregman method as special cases and also several new methods such as a sparse Kaczmarz solver. The algorithmic framework has a variety of applications and is especially useful for problems in which the linear measurements are slow and expensive to obtain. We present examples for online compressed sensing, TV tomographic reconstruction and radio interferometry.

OCSep 9, 2013
The Linearized Bregman Method via Split Feasibility Problems: Analysis and Generalizations

Dirk A. Lorenz, Frank Schöpfer, Stephan Wenger

The linearized Bregman method is a method to calculate sparse solutions to systems of linear equations. We formulate this problem as a split feasibility problem, propose an algorithmic framework based on Bregman projections and prove a general convergence result for this framework. Convergence of the linearized Bregman method will be obtained as a special case. Our approach also allows for several generalizations such as other objective functions, incremental iterations, incorporation of non-gaussian noise models or box constraints.