LGMLApr 4, 2025

Safe Screening Rules for Group OWL Models

arXiv:2504.03152v21 citationsh-index: 10IJCNN
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses computational bottlenecks for researchers and practitioners using Group OWL models in high-dimensional sparse multi-task learning with correlated features, representing an incremental improvement.

The paper tackles the high computational cost and memory usage of Group OWL models in high-dimensional scenarios by proposing the first safe screening rule that identifies inactive features with zero coefficients across tasks, achieving significant computational speedup without accuracy loss.

Group Ordered Weighted $L_{1}$-Norm (Group OWL) regularized models have emerged as a useful procedure for high-dimensional sparse multi-task learning with correlated features. Proximal gradient methods are used as standard approaches to solving Group OWL models. However, Group OWL models usually suffer huge computational costs and memory usage when the feature size is large in the high-dimensional scenario. To address this challenge, in this paper, we are the first to propose the safe screening rule for Group OWL models by effectively tackling the structured non-separable penalty, which can quickly identify the inactive features that have zero coefficients across all the tasks. Thus, by removing the inactive features during the training process, we may achieve substantial computational gain and memory savings. More importantly, the proposed screening rule can be directly integrated with the existing solvers both in the batch and stochastic settings. Theoretically, we prove our screening rule is safe and also can be safely applied to the existing iterative optimization algorithms. Our experimental results demonstrate that our screening rule can effectively identify the inactive features and leads to a significant computational speedup without any loss of accuracy.

Foundations

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

Your Notes