Description of the minimizers of least squares regularized~ with~ 0-norm. Uniqueness of the global minimizer
Abstract
We have an real-valued arbitrary matrix A (e.g. a dictionary) with < and data d describing the sought-after object with the help of A. This work provides an in-depth analysis of the (local and global) minimizers of an objective function combining a quadratic data-fidelity term and an 0 penalty applied to each entry of the sought-after solution, weighted by a regularization parameter >0. For several decades, this objective has attracted a ceaseless effort to conceive algorithms approaching a good minimizer. Our theoretical contributions, summarized below, shed new light on the existing algorithms and can help the conception of innovative numerical schemes. To solve the normal equation associated with any -row submatrix of A is equivalent to compute a local minimizer of . (Local) minimizers of are strict if and only if the submatrix, composed of those columns of A whose indexes form the support of , has full column rank. An outcome is that strict local minimizers of are easily computed without knowing the value of . Each strict local minimizer is linear in data. It is proved that has global minimizers and that they are always strict. They are studied in more details under the (standard) assumption that (A)=<. The global minimizers with -length support are seen to be impractical. Given d, critical values for any ≤-1 are exhibited such that if >, all global minimizers of are -sparse. An assumption on A is adopted and proved to fail only on a closed negligible subset. Then for all data d beyond a closed negligible subset, the objective for >, ≤-1, has a unique global minimizer and this minimizer is -sparse. Instructive small-size (5 10) numerical illustrations confirm the main theoretical results.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.