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 implicit online learning


Temporal Variability in Implicit Online Learning

Neural Information Processing Systems

In the setting of online learning, Implicit algorithms turn out to be highly successful from a practical standpoint. However, the tightest regret analyses only show marginal improvements over Online Mirror Descent. In this work, we shed light on this behavior carrying out a careful regret analysis. We prove a novel static regret bound that depends on the temporal variability of the sequence of loss functions, a quantity which is often encountered when considering dynamic competitors. We show, for example, that the regret can be constant if the temporal variability is constant and the learning rate is tuned appropriately, without the need of smooth losses. Moreover, we present an adaptive algorithm that achieves this regret bound without prior knowledge of the temporal variability and prove a matching lower bound.


Review for NeurIPS paper: Temporal Variability in Implicit Online Learning

Neural Information Processing Systems

This paper considers the implicit update algorithm for online learning (a.k.a. It is shown that the algorithm achieves a regret bound that is adapted to the variability of the sequence of loss functions. This holds even without the smoothness of the loss. I believe this is a firm contribution to the fields of online learning and stochastic optimization. Firstly, Implicit updates are known to have practical advantages, but their theoretical understanding has been limited to the fact that they enjoy the same worst-case regret guarantees as their explicit counterparts. This is one of a very few works (if not the first one) which shows a nontrivial advantages of the implicit methods and thus makes a significant progress in better understanding of their behavior.


Temporal Variability in Implicit Online Learning

Neural Information Processing Systems

In the setting of online learning, Implicit algorithms turn out to be highly successful from a practical standpoint. However, the tightest regret analyses only show marginal improvements over Online Mirror Descent. In this work, we shed light on this behavior carrying out a careful regret analysis. We prove a novel static regret bound that depends on the temporal variability of the sequence of loss functions, a quantity which is often encountered when considering dynamic competitors. We show, for example, that the regret can be constant if the temporal variability is constant and the learning rate is tuned appropriately, without the need of smooth losses. Moreover, we present an adaptive algorithm that achieves this regret bound without prior knowledge of the temporal variability and prove a matching lower bound.


implicit Online Learning with Kernels

Neural Information Processing Systems

Our first algorithm, ILK (implicit online learning with kernels), employs a new, implicit update technique that can be applied to a wide variety of convex loss functions. We then introduce a bounded memory version, SILK (sparse ILK), that maintains a compact representation of the predictor without compromising solution quality, even in non-stationary environments. We prove loss bounds and analyze the convergence rate of both. Experimental evidence shows that our proposed algorithms outperform current methods on synthetic and real data.


implicit Online Learning with Kernels

Neural Information Processing Systems

Our first algorithm, ILK (implicit online learning with kernels), employs a new, implicit update technique that can be applied to a wide variety of convex loss functions. We then introduce a bounded memory version, SILK (sparse ILK), that maintains a compact representation of the predictor without compromising solution quality, even in non-stationary environments. We prove loss bounds and analyze the convergence rate of both. Experimental evidence shows that our proposed algorithms outperform current methods on synthetic and real data.