Reduced-Rank Regression with Operator Norm Error

November 09, 2020 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Annual Conference Computational Learning Theory

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Authors Praneeth Kacham, David P. Woodruff arXiv ID 2011.04564 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Citations 3 Venue Annual Conference Computational Learning Theory Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
A common data analysis task is the reduced-rank regression problem: $$\min_{\textrm{rank-}k \ X} \|AX-B\|,$$ where $A \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times c}$ and $B \in \mathbb{R}^{n \times d}$ are given large matrices and $\|\cdot\|$ is some norm. Here the unknown matrix $X \in \mathbb{R}^{c \times d}$ is constrained to be of rank $k$ as it results in a significant parameter reduction of the solution when $c$ and $d$ are large. In the case of Frobenius norm error, there is a standard closed form solution to this problem and a fast algorithm to find a $(1+\varepsilon)$-approximate solution. However, for the important case of operator norm error, no closed form solution is known and the fastest known algorithms take singular value decomposition time. We give the first randomized algorithms for this problem running in time $$(nnz{(A)} + nnz{(B)} + c^2) \cdot k/\varepsilon^{1.5} + (n+d)k^2/Ξ΅+ c^Ο‰,$$ up to a polylogarithmic factor involving condition numbers, matrix dimensions, and dependence on $1/\varepsilon$. Here $nnz{(M)}$ denotes the number of non-zero entries of a matrix $M$, and $Ο‰$ is the exponent of matrix multiplication. As both (1) spectral low rank approximation ($A = B$) and (2) linear system solving ($n = c$ and $d = 1$) are special cases, our time cannot be improved by more than a $1/\varepsilon$ factor (up to polylogarithmic factors) without a major breakthrough in linear algebra. Interestingly, known techniques for low rank approximation, such as alternating minimization or sketch-and-solve, provably fail for this problem. Instead, our algorithm uses an existential characterization of a solution, together with Krylov methods, low degree polynomial approximation, and sketching-based preconditioning.
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