Analysis of gradient descent methods with non-diminishing, bounded errors

04/01/2016
by   Arunselvan Ramaswamy, et al.
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The main aim of this paper is to provide an analysis of gradient descent (GD) algorithms with gradient errors that do not necessarily vanish, asymptotically. In particular, sufficient conditions are presented for both stability (almost sure boundedness of the iterates) and convergence of GD with bounded, (possibly) non-diminishing gradient errors. In addition to ensuring stability, such an algorithm is shown to converge to a small neighborhood of the minimum set, which depends on the gradient errors. It is worth noting that the main result of this paper can be used to show that GD with asymptotically vanishing errors indeed converges to the minimum set. The results presented herein are not only more general when compared to previous results, but our analysis of GD with errors is new to the literature to the best of our knowledge. Our work extends the contributions of Mangasarian & Solodov, Bertsekas & Tsitsiklis and Tadic & Doucet. Using our framework, a simple yet effective implementation of GD using simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximations (SP SA), with constant sensitivity parameters, is presented. Another important improvement over many previous results is that there are no `additional' restrictions imposed on the step-sizes. In machine learning applications where step-sizes are related to learning rates, our assumptions, unlike those of other papers, do not affect these learning rates. Finally, we present experimental results to validate our theory.

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