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Finite Precision Stochastic Optimisation -- Accounting for the Bias

IEEE Transactions on Information Theory (IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory), 2019
Abstract

We consider first order stochastic optimization where the oracle must quantize each subgradient estimate to rr bits. We treat two oracle models: the first where the Euclidean norm of the oracle output is almost surely bounded and the second where it is mean square bounded. Prior work in this setting assumes the availability of unbiased quantizers. While this assumption is valid in the case of almost surely bounded oracles, it does not hold true for the standard setting of mean square bounded oracles, and the bias can dramatically affect the convergence rate. We analyze the performance of standard quantizers from prior work in combination with projected stochastic gradient descent for both these oracle models and present two new adaptive quantizers that outperform the existing ones. Specifically, for almost surely bounded oracles, we establish first a lower bound for the precision needed to attain the standard convergence rate of T12T^{-\frac 12} for optimizing convex functions over a dd-dimentional domain. Our proposed Rotated Adaptive Tetra-iterated Quantizer (RATQ) is merely a factor O(logloglogd)O(\log \log \log^\ast d) far from this lower bound. For mean square bounded oracles, we show that a state-of-the-art Rotated Uniform Quantizer (RUQ) from prior work would need atleast Ω(dlogT)\Omega(d\log T) bits to achieve the convergence rate of T12T^{-\frac 12}, using any optimization protocol. However, our proposed Rotated Adaptive Quantizer (RAQ) outperforms RUQ in this setting and attains a convergence rate of T12T^{-\frac 12} using a precision of only O(dloglogT)O(d\log\log T). For mean square bounded oracles, in the communication-starved regime where the precision rr is fixed to a constant independent of TT, we show that RUQ cannot attain a convergence rate better than T14T^{-\frac 14} for any rr, while RAQ can attain convergence at rates arbitrarily close to T12T^{-\frac 12} as rr increases.

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