Large-Scale Optimization
Spectral projected gradient method for large-scale optimization with simple constraints.
spg(par, fn, gr=NULL, method=3, lower=-Inf, upper=Inf, project=NULL, projectArgs=NULL, control=list(), quiet=FALSE, alertConvergence=TRUE, ...)
par |
A real vector argument to |
fn |
Nonlinear objective function that is to be optimized. A scalar function that takes a real vector as argument and returns a scalar that is the value of the function at that point (see details). |
gr |
The gradient of the objective function |
method |
An integer (1, 2, or 3) specifying which Barzilai-Borwein steplength to use. The default is 3. See *Details*. |
upper |
An upper bound for box constraints. |
lower |
An lower bound for box constraints. |
project |
A projection
function or character string indicating its name. The projection
function takes a point in R^n and
projects it onto a region that defines the constraints of the problem.
This is a vector-function that takes a real vector as argument and
returns a real vector of the same length. See *Details*.
If a projection function is not supplied, arguments |
projectArgs |
A list with arguments to the |
control |
A list of control parameters. See *Details*. |
quiet |
A logical variable (TRUE/FALSE). If |
alertConvergence |
A logical variable. With the default |
... |
Additional arguments passed to |
R adaptation, with significant modifications, by Ravi Varadhan, Johns Hopkins University (March 25, 2008), from the original FORTRAN code of Birgin, Martinez, and Raydan (2001). The original is available at the TANGO project http://www.ime.usp.br/~egbirgin/tango/downloads.php
A major modification in our R adaptation of the original FORTRAN code is the
availability of 3 different options for Barzilai-Borwein (BB)
steplengths: method = 1
is the BB
steplength used in Birgin, Martinez and Raydan (2000); method = 2
is
the other steplength proposed in Barzilai and Borwein's (1988) original paper.
Finally, method = 3
, is a new steplength, which was first proposed in
Varadhan and Roland (2008) for accelerating the EM algorithm.
In fact, Varadhan and Roland (2008) considered 3 similar steplength schemes in
their EM acceleration work. Here, we have chosen method = 3
as the "default" method. This method may be slightly slower than the
other 2 BB steplength schemes, but it generally exhibited more reliable
convergence to a better optimum in our experiments.
We recommend that the user try the other steplength schemes if the default
method does not perform well in their problem.
Box constraints can be imposed by vectors lower
and upper
.
Scalar values for lower
and upper
are expanded to apply to
all parameters. The default lower
is -Inf
and upper
is +Inf
, which imply no constraints.
The project
argument provides a way to implement more general constraints
to be imposed on the parameters in spg
. projectArgs
is passed
to the project
function if one is specified. The first argument of any project
function should be par
and any other arguments should be passed using its argument projectArgs
.
To avoid confusion it is suggested that user defined project
functions should not use arguments lower
and upper
.
The function projectLinear
incorporates linear equalities and
inequalities. This function also provides an example of how other projections
might be implemented.
Argument control
is a list specifing any changes to default values of
algorithm control parameters. Note that the names of these must be
specified completely. Partial matching will not work.
The list items are as follows:
A positive integer, typically between 5-20, that controls the monotonicity of the algorithm. M=1
would enforce strict monotonicity
in the reduction of L2-norm of fn
, whereas larger values allow for more non-monotonicity. Global convergence under non-monotonicity is ensured by
enforcing the Grippo-Lampariello-Lucidi condition (Grippo et al. 1986) in a non-monotone line-search algorithm. Values of M
between 5 to 20 are generally good. The default is M = 10
.
The maximum number of iterations. The default is maxit = 1500
.
Convergence tolerance on the absolute change in objective function between successive iterations.
Convergence is declared when the change is less than ftol
. Default is ftol = 1.e-10
.
Convergence tolerance on the infinity-norm of projected gradient gr
evaluated at the current parameter.
Convergence is declared when the infinity-norm of projected gradient is less
than gtol
. Default is gtol = 1.e-05
.
Maximum limit on the number of function evaluations. Default is maxfeval = 10000
.
A logical variable indicating whether the objective function is to be maximized. Default is maximize = FALSE
indicating
minimization. For maximization (e.g. log-likelihood maximization in statistical modeling), this may be set to TRUE
.
A logical variable (TRUE/FALSE). If TRUE
, information on
the progress of optimization is printed. Default is trace = !quiet
.
An integer that controls the frequency of tracing
when trace=TRUE
. Default is triter=10
, which means that
the objective fn
and the infinity-norm of its projected gradient are
printed at every 10-th iteration.
A small positive increment used in the finite-difference approximation of gradient. Default is 1.e-07.
NULL
or a logical variable TRUE/FALSE
indicating whether to
check the provided analytical gradient against a numerical approximation.
With the default NULL
the gradient is checked if it is estimated to take
less than about ten seconds. A warning will be issued in the case it takes
longer. The default can be overridden by specifying TRUE
or FALSE
.
It is recommended that this be set to FALSE for high-dimensional problems,
after making sure that the gradient is correctly specified, possibly by running
once with TRUE
specified.
A small positive value use to compare the maximum relative difference between a user supplied gradient gr and the numerical approximation calculated by grad from package numDeriv. The default is 1.e-06. If this value is exceeded then an error message is issued, as it is a reasonable indication of a problem with the user supplied gr. The user can either fix the gr function, remove it so the finite-difference approximation is used, or increase the tolerance so the check passes.
A list with the following components:
par |
Parameters that optimize the nonlinear objective function, if convergence is successful. |
value |
The value of the objective function at termination. |
gradient |
L-infinity norm of the projected gradient of the objective function at termination. If convergence is successful, this should be less than |
fn.reduction |
Reduction in the value of the function from its initial value. This is negative in maximization. |
iter |
Number of iterations taken by the algorithm. The gradient is evaluated once each iteration, so the number of gradient evaluations will also be equal to |
feval |
Number of times the objective |
convergence |
An integer code indicating type of convergence. |
message |
A text message explaining which termination criterion was used. |
Birgin EG, Martinez JM, and Raydan M (2000): Nonmonotone spectral projected gradient methods on convex sets, SIAM J Optimization, 10, 1196-1211.
Birgin EG, Martinez JM, and Raydan M (2001): SPG: software for convex-constrained optimization, ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software.
L Grippo, F Lampariello, and S Lucidi (1986), A nonmonotone line search technique for Newton's method, SIAM J on Numerical Analysis, 23, 707-716.
M Raydan (1997), Barzilai-Borwein gradient method for large-scale unconstrained minimization problem, SIAM J of Optimization, 7, 26-33.
R Varadhan and C Roland (2008), Simple and globally-convergent methods for accelerating the convergence of any EM algorithm, Scandinavian J Statistics, doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9469.2007.00585.x.
R Varadhan and PD Gilbert (2009), BB: An R Package for Solving a Large System of Nonlinear Equations and for Optimizing a High-Dimensional Nonlinear Objective Function, J. Statistical Software, 32:4, http://www.jstatsoft.org/v32/i04/
sc2.f <- function(x){ sum((1:length(x)) * (exp(x) - x)) / 10} sc2.g <- function(x){ (1:length(x)) * (exp(x) - 1) / 10} p0 <- rnorm(50) ans.spg1 <- spg(par=p0, fn=sc2.f) # Default is method=3 ans.spg2 <- spg(par=p0, fn=sc2.f, method=1) ans.spg3 <- spg(par=p0, fn=sc2.f, method=2) ans.cg <- optim(par=p0, fn=sc2.f, method="CG") #Uses conjugate-gradient method in "optim" ans.lbfgs <- optim(par=p0, fn=sc2.f, method="L-BFGS-B") #Uses low-memory BFGS method in "optim" # Now we use exact gradient. # Computation is much faster compared to when using numerical gradient. ans.spg1 <- spg(par=p0, fn=sc2.f, gr=sc2.g) ############ # Another example illustrating use of additional parameters to objective function valley.f <- function(x, cons) { n <- length(x) f <- rep(NA, n) j <- 3 * (1:(n/3)) jm2 <- j - 2 jm1 <- j - 1 f[jm2] <- (cons[2] * x[jm2]^3 + cons[1] * x[jm2]) * exp(-(x[jm2]^2)/100) - 1 f[jm1] <- 10 * (sin(x[jm2]) - x[jm1]) f[j] <- 10 * (cos(x[jm2]) - x[j]) sum(f*f) } k <- c(1.003344481605351, -3.344481605351171e-03) p0 <- rnorm(30) # number of parameters should be a multiple of 3 for this example ans.spg2 <- spg(par=p0, fn=valley.f, cons=k, method=2) ans.cg <- optim(par=p0, fn=valley.f, cons=k, method="CG") ans.lbfgs <- optim(par=p0, fn=valley.f, cons=k, method="L-BFGS-B") #################################################################### # Here is a statistical example illustrating log-likelihood maximization. poissmix.loglik <- function(p,y) { # Log-likelihood for a binary Poisson mixture i <- 0:(length(y)-1) loglik <- y*log(p[1]*exp(-p[2])*p[2]^i/exp(lgamma(i+1)) + (1 - p[1])*exp(-p[3])*p[3]^i/exp(lgamma(i+1))) return (sum(loglik) ) } # Data from Hasselblad (JASA 1969) poissmix.dat <- data.frame(death=0:9, freq=c(162,267,271,185,111,61,27,8,3,1)) y <- poissmix.dat$freq # Lower and upper bounds on parameters lo <- c(0.001,0,0) hi <- c(0.999, Inf, Inf) p0 <- runif(3,c(0.2,1,1),c(0.8,5,8)) # randomly generated starting values ans.spg <- spg(par=p0, fn=poissmix.loglik, y=y, lower=lo, upper=hi, control=list(maximize=TRUE)) # how to compute hessian at the MLE require(numDeriv) hess <- hessian(x=ans.spg$par, poissmix.loglik, y=y) se <- sqrt(-diag(solve(hess))) # approximate standard errors
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