OCLGMLFeb 18, 2014

A convergence proof of the split Bregman method for regularized least-squares problems

arXiv:1402.4371v124 citations
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This work addresses convergence issues for researchers in optimization and imaging, offering incremental improvements in theoretical analysis.

The paper tackles the impractical assumptions in existing convergence proofs of the split Bregman method for regularized least-squares problems, such as in X-ray CT image reconstruction, by providing a convergence proof with inexact updates and showing that an ADMM algorithm can be faster under certain conditions.

The split Bregman (SB) method [T. Goldstein and S. Osher, SIAM J. Imaging Sci., 2 (2009), pp. 323-43] is a fast splitting-based algorithm that solves image reconstruction problems with general l1, e.g., total-variation (TV) and compressed sensing (CS), regularizations by introducing a single variable split to decouple the data-fitting term and the regularization term, yielding simple subproblems that are separable (or partially separable) and easy to minimize. Several convergence proofs have been proposed, and these proofs either impose a "full column rank" assumption to the split or assume exact updates in all subproblems. However, these assumptions are impractical in many applications such as the X-ray computed tomography (CT) image reconstructions, where the inner least-squares problem usually cannot be solved efficiently due to the highly shift-variant Hessian. In this paper, we show that when the data-fitting term is quadratic, the SB method is a convergent alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM), and a straightforward convergence proof with inexact updates is given using [J. Eckstein and D. P. Bertsekas, Mathematical Programming, 55 (1992), pp. 293-318, Theorem 8]. Furthermore, since the SB method is just a special case of an ADMM algorithm, it seems likely that the ADMM algorithm will be faster than the SB method if the augmented Largangian (AL) penalty parameters are selected appropriately. To have a concrete example, we conduct a convergence rate analysis of the ADMM algorithm using two splits for image restoration problems with quadratic data-fitting term and regularization term. According to our analysis, we can show that the two-split ADMM algorithm can be faster than the SB method if the AL penalty parameter of the SB method is suboptimal. Numerical experiments were conducted to verify our analysis.

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