LGITOct 5, 2016

Low-tubal-rank Tensor Completion using Alternating Minimization

arXiv:1610.01690v1139 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses tensor completion for multidimensional data like video, offering a faster and more accurate solution, though it is incremental as it adapts a matrix method to tensors.

The paper tackles the low-tubal-rank tensor completion problem by proposing Tubal-Alt-Min, an iterative algorithm that recovers third-order tensors from randomly observed elements, achieving exponential convergence and reducing recovery error by orders of magnitude compared to prior methods.

The low-tubal-rank tensor model has been recently proposed for real-world multidimensional data. In this paper, we study the low-tubal-rank tensor completion problem, i.e., to recover a third-order tensor by observing a subset of its elements selected uniformly at random. We propose a fast iterative algorithm, called {\em Tubal-Alt-Min}, that is inspired by a similar approach for low-rank matrix completion. The unknown low-tubal-rank tensor is represented as the product of two much smaller tensors with the low-tubal-rank property being automatically incorporated, and Tubal-Alt-Min alternates between estimating those two tensors using tensor least squares minimization. First, we note that tensor least squares minimization is different from its matrix counterpart and nontrivial as the circular convolution operator of the low-tubal-rank tensor model is intertwined with the sub-sampling operator. Second, the theoretical performance guarantee is challenging since Tubal-Alt-Min is iterative and nonconvex in nature. We prove that 1) Tubal-Alt-Min guarantees exponential convergence to the global optima, and 2) for an $n \times n \times k$ tensor with tubal-rank $r \ll n$, the required sampling complexity is $O(nr^2k \log^3 n)$ and the computational complexity is $O(n^2rk^2 \log^2 n)$. Third, on both synthetic data and real-world video data, evaluation results show that compared with tensor-nuclear norm minimization (TNN-ADMM), Tubal-Alt-Min improves the recovery error dramatically (by orders of magnitude). It is estimated that Tubal-Alt-Min converges at an exponential rate $10^{-0.4423 \text{Iter}}$ where $\text{Iter}$ denotes the number of iterations, which is much faster than TNN-ADMM's $10^{-0.0332 \text{Iter}}$, and the running time can be accelerated by more than $5$ times for a $200 \times 200 \times 20$ tensor.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes