MLLGOCFeb 7, 2025

Online Covariance Estimation in Nonsmooth Stochastic Approximation

arXiv:2502.05305v27 citationsh-index: 33COLT
Originality Incremental advance
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This enables asymptotically valid statistical inference, such as confidence intervals and hypothesis testing, for nonsmooth SA problems, addressing a gap in existing methods.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating the limiting covariance matrix in nonsmooth and potentially nonconvex stochastic approximation (SA) methods, proposing an online batch-means estimator that achieves a convergence rate of O(√d n^{-1/8+ε}) for any ε>0, matching the best-known rate in smoother settings.

We consider applying stochastic approximation (SA) methods to solve nonsmooth variational inclusion problems. Existing studies have shown that the averaged iterates of SA methods exhibit asymptotic normality, with an optimal limiting covariance matrix in the local minimax sense of Hájek and Le Cam. However, no methods have been proposed to estimate this covariance matrix in a nonsmooth and potentially non-monotone (nonconvex) setting. In this paper, we study an online batch-means covariance matrix estimator introduced in Zhu et al.(2023). The estimator groups the SA iterates appropriately and computes the sample covariance among batches as an estimate of the limiting covariance. Its construction does not require prior knowledge of the total sample size, and updates can be performed recursively as new data arrives. We establish that, as long as the batch size sequence is properly specified (depending on the stepsize sequence), the estimator achieves a convergence rate of order $O(\sqrt{d}n^{-1/8+\varepsilon})$ for any $\varepsilon>0$, where $d$ and $n$ denote the problem dimensionality and the number of iterations (or samples) used. Although the problem is nonsmooth and potentially non-monotone (nonconvex), our convergence rate matches the best-known rate for covariance estimation methods using only first-order information in smooth and strongly-convex settings. The consistency of this covariance estimator enables asymptotically valid statistical inference, including constructing confidence intervals and performing hypothesis testing.

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