Practical and Scalable Hamiltonian Monte Carlo Without the Metropolis Test

Abstract

Hamiltonian Monte Carlo and underdamped Langevin Monte Carlo are leading methods for sampling from high-dimensional distributions with differentiable densities. Both rely on numerical integration, which introduces asymptotic bias in expectation estimates. This bias can be removed by adjusting the numerical integration with a Metropolis Hastings (MH) step, at a cost of slower mixing and larger variance. Alternatively, we can trade bias for lower variance if we avoid the MH step and use an appropriate step size of integration. These unadjusted schemes have strong performance, especially in high-dimensional problems, but are rarely used due to the lack of automated step size selection. We propose an automatic tuning scheme that selects a step size to meet a user-specified asymptotic bias tolerance. The method is based on a relationship between energy error and bias which we establish. We rigorously analyze the method in the Gaussian setting and numerically extend the analysis to several non Gaussian problems. Experiments on Bayesian inference and large scale statistical physics models (with over one million parameters) show that, with our tuning, unadjusted methods consistently and significantly outperform adjusted counterparts.

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