2019 IEEE 60th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS) | 2019

Smoothed Analysis in Unsupervised Learning via Decoupling

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Smoothed analysis is a powerful paradigm in overcoming worst-case intractability in unsupervised learning and high-dimensional data analysis. While polynomial time smoothed analysis guarantees have been obtained for worst-case intractable problems like tensor decompositions and learning mixtures of Gaussians, such guarantees have been hard to obtain for several other important problems in unsupervised learning. A core technical challenge in analyzing algorithms is obtaining lower bounds on the least singular value for random matrix ensembles with dependent entries, that are given by low-degree polynomials of a few base underlying random variables. In this work, we address this challenge by obtaining high-confidence lower bounds on the least singular value of new classes of structured random matrix ensembles of the above kind. We then use these bounds to design algorithms with polynomial time smoothed analysis guarantees for the following three important problems in unsupervised learning: •Robust subspace recovery, when the fraction of inliers in the d-dimensional subspace T of the n-dimensional Euclidean space is at least (d/n)^t for any positive integer t. This contrasts with the known worst-case intractability when the fraction of inliers is at most d/n, and the previous smoothed analysis result (Hardt and Moitra, 2013). •Learning overcomplete hidden markov models, where the size of the state space is any polynomial in the dimension of the observations. This gives the first polynomial time guarantees for learning overcomplete HMMs in the smoothed analysis model. •Higher order tensor decompositions, where we generalize and analyze the so-called FOOBI algorithm of Cardoso to find order-t rank-one tensors in a subspace. This gives polynomially robust decomposition algorithms for order-2t tensors with rank n^t.

Volume None
Pages 582-610
DOI 10.1109/FOCS.2019.00043
Language English
Journal 2019 IEEE 60th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS)

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