Oxford Mathematics in partnership with the Science Museum is delighted to announce its first Public Lecture in London. World-renowned mathematician Andrew Wiles will be our speaker. Andrew will be talking about his current work and will also be in conversation with mathematician and broadcaster Hannah Fry after the lecture. Attendance is free.

28th November, 6.30pm, Science Museum, London, SW7 2DD

Dynamic Hedging of Financial Instruments When the Underlying Follows a Non-Gaussian Process
Cartea, Á (May 2005)
Portfolio Liquidation and Ambiguity Aversion
Cartea, Á Donnelly, R Jaimungal, S (01 Jan 2017)
How to Value a Gas Storage Facility
Cartea, Á Cheeseman, J Jaimungal, S (11 Jan 2014)
Order-Flow and Liquidity Provision
Cartea, Á Jaimungal, S (21 Jan 2015)
Volatility and covariation of financial assets: A high-frequency analysis
Cartea, Á Karyampas, D Journal of Banking & Finance volume 35 issue 12 3319-3334 (Dec 2011)
Tue, 31 Oct 2017

14:00 - 14:30
L5

Dual Acceleration for Nonconvex Optimisation

Matthew Geleta
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract


The phenomenon of poor algorithmic scalability is a critical problem in large-scale machine learning and data science. This has led to a resurgence in the use of first-order (Hessian-free) algorithms from classical optimisation. One major drawback is that first-order methods tend to converge extremely slowly. However, there exist techniques for efficiently accelerating them.
    
The topic of this talk is the Dual Regularisation Nonlinear Acceleration algorithm (DRNA) (Geleta, 2017) for nonconvex optimisation. Numerical studies using the CUTEst optimisation problem set show the method to accelerate several nonconvex optimisation algorithms, including quasi-Newton BFGS and steepest descent methods. DRNA compares favourably with a number of existing accelerators in these studies.
    
DRNA extends to the nonconvex setting a recent acceleration algorithm due to Scieur et al. (Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 29, 2016). We have proven theorems relating DRNA to the Kylov subspace method GMRES, as well as to Anderson's acceleration method and family of multi-secant quasi-Newton methods.
 

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