C. De Mol

2papers

2 Papers

NAOct 2, 2014
Proceedings of the second "international Traveling Workshop on Interactions between Sparse models and Technology" (iTWIST'14)

L. Jacques, C. De Vleeschouwer, Y. Boursier et al.

The implicit objective of the biennial "international - Traveling Workshop on Interactions between Sparse models and Technology" (iTWIST) is to foster collaboration between international scientific teams by disseminating ideas through both specific oral/poster presentations and free discussions. For its second edition, the iTWIST workshop took place in the medieval and picturesque town of Namur in Belgium, from Wednesday August 27th till Friday August 29th, 2014. The workshop was conveniently located in "The Arsenal" building within walking distance of both hotels and town center. iTWIST'14 has gathered about 70 international participants and has featured 9 invited talks, 10 oral presentations, and 14 posters on the following themes, all related to the theory, application and generalization of the "sparsity paradigm": Sparsity-driven data sensing and processing; Union of low dimensional subspaces; Beyond linear and convex inverse problem; Matrix/manifold/graph sensing/processing; Blind inverse problems and dictionary learning; Sparsity and computational neuroscience; Information theory, geometry and randomness; Complexity/accuracy tradeoffs in numerical methods; Sparsity? What's next?; Sparse machine learning and inference.

NAFeb 25, 2009
Accelerating gradient projection methods for $\ell_1$-constrained signal recovery by steplength selection rules

I. Loris, M. Bertero, C. De Mol et al.

We propose a new gradient projection algorithm that compares favorably with the fastest algorithms available to date for $\ell_1$-constrained sparse recovery from noisy data, both in the compressed sensing and inverse problem frameworks. The method exploits a line-search along the feasible direction and an adaptive steplength selection based on recent strategies for the alternation of the well-known Barzilai-Borwein rules. The convergence of the proposed approach is discussed and a computational study on both well-conditioned and ill-conditioned problems is carried out for performance evaluations in comparison with five other algorithms proposed in the literature.