sparse online learning
Quantum Algorithm for Sparse Online Learning with Truncated Gradient Descent
Lim, Debbie, Qiu, Yixian, Rebentrost, Patrick, Wang, Qisheng
Logistic regression, the Support Vector Machine (SVM), and least squares are well-studied methods in the statistical and computer science community, with various practical applications. High-dimensional data arriving on a real-time basis makes the design of online learning algorithms that produce sparse solutions essential. The seminal work of \hyperlink{cite.langford2009sparse}{Langford, Li, and Zhang (2009)} developed a method to obtain sparsity via truncated gradient descent, showing a near-optimal online regret bound. Based on this method, we develop a quantum sparse online learning algorithm for logistic regression, the SVM, and least squares. Given efficient quantum access to the inputs, we show that a quadratic speedup in the time complexity with respect to the dimension of the problem is achievable, while maintaining a regret of $O(1/\sqrt{T})$, where $T$ is the number of iterations.
Screening for Sparse Online Learning
Sparsity promoting regularizers are widely used to impose low-complexity structure (e.g. l1-norm for sparsity) to the regression coefficients of supervised learning. In the realm of deterministic optimization, the sequence generated by iterative algorithms (such as proximal gradient descent) exhibit "finite activity identification", namely, they can identify the low-complexity structure in a finite number of iterations. However, most online algorithms (such as proximal stochastic gradient descent) do not have the property owing to the vanishing step-size and non-vanishing variance. In this paper, by combining with a screening rule, we show how to eliminate useless features of the iterates generated by online algorithms, and thereby enforce finite activity identification. One consequence is that when combined with any convergent online algorithm, sparsity properties imposed by the regularizer can be exploited for computational gains. Numerically, significant acceleration can be obtained.
Sparse Online Learning via Truncated Gradient
Langford, John, Li, Lihong, Zhang, Tong
We propose a general method called truncated gradient to induce sparsity in the weights of online-learning algorithms with convex loss. This method has several essential properties. First, the degree of sparsity is continuous---a parameter controls the rate of sparsification from no sparsification to total sparsification. Second, the approach is theoretically motivated, and an instance of it can be regarded as an online counterpart of the popular $L_1$-regularization method in the batch setting. We prove that small rates of sparsification result in only small additional regret with respect to typical online-learning guarantees. Finally, the approach works well empirically. We apply it to several datasets and find that for datasets with large numbers of features, substantial sparsity is discoverable.