LGMLOct 1, 2018

A simple parameter-free and adaptive approach to optimization under a minimal local smoothness assumption

arXiv:1810.00997v240 citations
Originality Highly original
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This work addresses optimization challenges for practitioners dealing with noisy or deterministic function evaluations, offering a parameter-free and adaptive method that is not incremental but provides significant theoretical and empirical gains.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing a function with a budgeted number of evaluations under minimal local smoothness assumptions, achieving state-of-the-art regret guarantees that adapt to unknown noise levels and showing exponential improvements in low-noise regimes, including deterministic feedback cases.

We study the problem of optimizing a function under a \emph{budgeted number of evaluations}. We only assume that the function is \emph{locally} smooth around one of its global optima. The difficulty of optimization is measured in terms of 1) the amount of \emph{noise} $b$ of the function evaluation and 2) the local smoothness, $d$, of the function. A smaller $d$ results in smaller optimization error. We come with a new, simple, and parameter-free approach. First, for all values of $b$ and $d$, this approach recovers at least the state-of-the-art regret guarantees. Second, our approach additionally obtains these results while being \textit{agnostic} to the values of both $b$ and $d$. This leads to the first algorithm that naturally adapts to an \textit{unknown} range of noise $b$ and leads to significant improvements in a moderate and low-noise regime. Third, our approach also obtains a remarkable improvement over the state-of-the-art SOO algorithm when the noise is very low which includes the case of optimization under deterministic feedback ($b=0$). There, under our minimal local smoothness assumption, this improvement is of exponential magnitude and holds for a class of functions that covers the vast majority of functions that practitioners optimize ($d=0$). We show that our algorithmic improvement is borne out in experiments as we empirically show faster convergence on common benchmarks.

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