Inexact Proximal-Point Penalty Methods for Constrained Non-Convex Optimization

Abstract

In this paper, an inexact proximal-point penalty method is studied for constrained optimization problems, where the objective function is non-convex, and the constraint functions can also be non-convex. The proposed method approximately solves a sequence of subproblems, each of which is formed by adding to the original objective function a proximal term and quadratic penalty terms associated to the constraint functions. Under a weak-convexity assumption, each subproblem is made strongly convex and can be solved effectively to a required accuracy by an optimal gradient-based method. The computational complexity of the proposed method is analyzed separately for the cases of convex constraint and non-convex constraint. For both cases, the complexity results are established in terms of the number of proximal gradient steps needed to find an -stationary point. When the constraint functions are convex, we show a complexity result of O(-5/2) to produce an -stationary point under the Slater's condition. When the constraint functions are non-convex, the complexity becomes O(-3) if a non-singularity condition holds on constraints and otherwise O(-4) if a feasible initial solution is available.

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