nonlinear equation
Block Broyden's Methods for Solving Nonlinear Equations
This paper studies quasi-Newton methods for solving nonlinear equations. We propose block variants of both good and bad Broyden's methods, which enjoy explicit local superlinear convergence rates. Our block good Broyden's method has a faster condition-number-free convergence rate than existing Broyden's methods because it takes the advantage of multiple rank modification on Jacobian estimator. On the other hand, our block bad Broyden's method directly estimates the inverse of the Jacobian provably, which reduces the computational cost of the iteration. Our theoretical results provide some new insights on why good Broyden's method outperforms bad Broyden's method in most of the cases. The empirical results also demonstrate the superiority of our methods and validate our theoretical analysis.
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Curiosity-driven RL for symbolic equation solving
We explore if RL can be useful for symbolic mathematics. Previous work showed contrastive learning can solve linear equations in one variable. We show model-free PPO \cite{schulman2017proximal} augmented with curiosity-based exploration and graph-based actions can solve nonlinear equations such as those involving radicals, exponentials, and trig functions. Our work suggests curiosity-based exploration may be useful for general symbolic reasoning tasks.
Block Broyden's Methods for Solving Nonlinear Equations
This paper studies quasi-Newton methods for solving nonlinear equations. We propose block variants of both good and bad Broyden's methods, which enjoy explicit local superlinear convergence rates. Our block good Broyden's method has a faster condition-number-free convergence rate than existing Broyden's methods because it takes the advantage of multiple rank modification on Jacobian estimator. On the other hand, our block bad Broyden's method directly estimates the inverse of the Jacobian provably, which reduces the computational cost of the iteration. Our theoretical results provide some new insights on why good Broyden's method outperforms bad Broyden's method in most of the cases. The empirical results also demonstrate the superiority of our methods and validate our theoretical analysis.
- Asia > China > Shanghai > Shanghai (0.04)
- Asia > China > Hong Kong (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye (0.04)
- Asia > China > Shanghai > Shanghai (0.04)
- Asia > China > Hong Kong (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye (0.04)
- North America > United States > Texas > Schleicher County (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Pasadena (0.04)
- North America > Canada > British Columbia > Metro Vancouver Regional District > Vancouver (0.04)
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- Research Report > New Finding (0.69)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.45)
Simulation Based Control Architecture Using Webots and Simulink
Kurt, Harun, Cayir, Ahmet, Erkan, Kadir
This paper presents a simulation based control architecture that integrates Webots and Simulink for the development and testing of robotic systems. Using Webots for 3D physics based simulation and Simulink for control system design, real time testing and controller validation are achieved efficiently. The proposed approach aims to reduce hardware in the loop dependency in early development stages, offering a cost effective and modular control framework for academic, industrial, and robotics applications.
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- Europe > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Istanbul Province > Istanbul (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > Republic of Türkiye > Istanbul Province > Istanbul (0.04)
Block Broyden's Methods for Solving Nonlinear Equations
This paper studies quasi-Newton methods for solving nonlinear equations. We propose block variants of both good and bad Broyden's methods, which enjoy explicit local superlinear convergence rates. Our block good Broyden's method has faster condition-number-free convergence rate than existing Broyden's methods because it takes the advantage of multiple rank modification on the Jacobian estimator. On the other hand, our block bad Broyden's method directly estimates the inverse of the Jacobian provably, which reduces the computational cost of the iteration. Our theoretical results provide some new insights on why good Broyden's method outperforms bad Broyden's method in most of the cases.
Incremental Gauss--Newton Methods with Superlinear Convergence Rates
Zhou, Zhiling, Liu, Zhuanghua, Liu, Chengchang, Luo, Luo
This paper addresses the challenge of solving large-scale nonlinear equations with H\"older continuous Jacobians. We introduce a novel Incremental Gauss--Newton (IGN) method within explicit superlinear convergence rate, which outperforms existing methods that only achieve linear convergence rate. In particular, we formulate our problem by the nonlinear least squares with finite-sum structure, and our method incrementally iterates with the information of one component in each round. We also provide a mini-batch extension to our IGN method that obtains an even faster superlinear convergence rate. Furthermore, we conduct numerical experiments to show the advantages of the proposed methods.