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Quadratic Memory is Necessary for Optimal Query Complexity in Convex Optimization: Center-of-Mass is Pareto-Optimal

Abstract

We give query complexity lower bounds for convex optimization and the related feasibility problem. We show that quadratic memory is necessary to achieve the optimal oracle complexity for first-order convex optimization. In particular, this shows that center-of-mass cutting-planes algorithms in dimension dd which use O~(d2)\tilde O(d^2) memory and O~(d)\tilde O(d) queries are Pareto-optimal for both convex optimization and the feasibility problem, up to logarithmic factors. Precisely, we prove that to minimize 11-Lipschitz convex functions over the unit ball to 1/d41/d^4 accuracy, any deterministic first-order algorithms using at most d2δd^{2-\delta} bits of memory must make Ω~(d1+δ/3)\tilde\Omega(d^{1+\delta/3}) queries, for any δ[0,1]\delta\in[0,1]. For the feasibility problem, in which an algorithm only has access to a separation oracle, we show a stronger trade-off: for at most d2δd^{2-\delta} memory, the number of queries required is Ω~(d1+δ)\tilde\Omega(d^{1+\delta}). This resolves a COLT 2019 open problem of Woodworth and Srebro.

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