Title :
Feedback and weighting mechanisms for improving Jacobian (Hessian) estimates in the adaptive simultaneous perturbation algorithm
Author_Institution :
Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel, MD
Abstract :
It is known that a stochastic approximation (SA) analogue of the deterministic Newton-Raphson algorithm provides an asymptotically optimal or near-optimal form of stochastic search. However, directly determining the required Jacobian matrix (or Hessian matrix for optimization) has often been difficult or impossible in practice. This paper presents a general adaptive SA algorithm that is based on a simple method for estimating the Jacobian matrix while concurrently estimating the primary parameters of interest. Relative to prior methods for adaptively estimating the Jacobian matrix, the paper introduces two enhancements that generally improve the quality of the estimates for underlying Jacobian (Hessian) matrices, thereby improving the quality of the estimates for the primary parameters of interest. The first enhancement rests on a feedback process that uses previous Jacobian estimates to reduce the error in the current estimate. The second enhancement is based on the formation of an optimal weighting of "per-iteration" Jacobian estimates. Given its basis in the simultaneous perturbation mechanism, the algorithm requires only a small number of loss function or gradient measurements per iteration - independent of the problem dimension - to adaptively estimate the Jacobian matrix and parameters of primary interest. This paper provides the basic idea together with some analytical justification and a small-scale numerical evaluation
Keywords :
Hessian matrices; Jacobian matrices; Newton-Raphson method; feedback; parameter estimation; perturbation techniques; stochastic processes; Hessian matrix; Jacobian matrix; adaptive simultaneous perturbation; deterministic Newton-Raphson algorithm; feedback; parameter estimation; stochastic optimization; stochastic search; Adaptive algorithm; Approximation algorithms; Convergence; Feedback; Finite difference methods; Jacobian matrices; Laboratories; Loss measurement; Physics; Stochastic processes;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference, 2006
Conference_Location :
Minneapolis, MN
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0209-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0209-3
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2006.1657191