Learning Multiple Initial Solutions to Optimization Problems
This addresses a bottleneck in applications like robot control and autonomous driving by improving optimization performance under runtime constraints, though it is incremental as it builds on existing optimization methods.
The paper tackles the sensitivity of local optimization methods to initial solutions in sequential optimization problems by learning to predict multiple diverse initial solutions, resulting in significant and consistent improvements across three optimal control benchmark tasks.
Sequentially solving similar optimization problems under strict runtime constraints is essential for many applications, such as robot control, autonomous driving, and portfolio management. The performance of local optimization methods in these settings is sensitive to the initial solution: poor initialization can lead to slow convergence or suboptimal solutions. To address this challenge, we propose learning to predict \emph{multiple} diverse initial solutions given parameters that define the problem instance. We introduce two strategies for utilizing multiple initial solutions: (i) a single-optimizer approach, where the most promising initial solution is chosen using a selection function, and (ii) a multiple-optimizers approach, where several optimizers, potentially run in parallel, are each initialized with a different solution, with the best solution chosen afterward. Notably, by including a default initialization among predicted ones, the cost of the final output is guaranteed to be equal or lower than with the default initialization. We validate our method on three optimal control benchmark tasks: cart-pole, reacher, and autonomous driving, using different optimizers: DDP, MPPI, and iLQR. We find significant and consistent improvement with our method across all evaluation settings and demonstrate that it efficiently scales with the number of initial solutions required. The code is available at MISO (https://github.com/EladSharony/miso).