MLLGDec 14, 2025

Iterative Sampling Methods for Sinkhorn Distributionally Robust Optimization

arXiv:2512.12550v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses reliable decision-making under uncertainty for applications like stress-testing and robust learning, offering a novel primal perspective but is incremental in method.

The paper tackles Sinkhorn distributionally robust optimization by reformulating it as a bilevel program to simultaneously obtain optimal decisions and worst-case distributions, proposing sampling-based algorithms with theoretical guarantees and demonstrating effectiveness in adversarial classification.

Distributionally robust optimization (DRO) has emerged as a powerful paradigm for reliable decision-making under uncertainty. This paper focuses on DRO with ambiguity sets defined via the Sinkhorn discrepancy: an entropy-regularized Wasserstein distance, referred to as Sinkhorn DRO. Existing work primarily addresses Sinkhorn DRO from a dual perspective, leveraging its formulation as a conditional stochastic optimization problem, for which many stochastic gradient methods are applicable. However, the theoretical analyses of such methods often rely on the boundedness of the loss function, and it is indirect to obtain the worst-case distribution associated with Sinkhorn DRO. In contrast, we study Sinkhorn DRO from the primal perspective, by reformulating it as a bilevel program with several infinite-dimensional lower-level subproblems over probability space. This formulation enables us to simultaneously obtain the optimal robust decision and the worst-case distribution, which is valuable in practical settings, such as generating stress-test scenarios or designing robust learning algorithms. We propose both double-loop and single-loop sampling-based algorithms with theoretical guarantees to solve this bilevel program. Finally, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach through a numerical study on adversarial classification.

Foundations

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

Your Notes