Continuous Time Frank-Wolfe Does Not Zig-Zag, But Multistep Methods Do Not Accelerate
Abstract
The Frank-Wolfe algorithm has regained much interest in its use in structurally constrained machine learning applications. However, one major limitation of the Frank-Wolfe algorithm is the slow local convergence property due to the zig-zagging behavior. We observe that this zig-zagging phenomenon can be viewed as an artifact of discretization, as when the method is viewed as an Euler discretization of a continuous time flow, that flow does not zig-zag. For this reason, we propose multistep Frank-Wolfe variants based on discretizations of the same flow whose truncation errors decay as , where is the method's order. This strategy "stabilizes" the method, and allows tools like line search and momentum to have more benefit. However, in terms of a convergence rate, our result is ultimately negative, suggesting that no Runge-Kutta-type discretization scheme can achieve a better convergence rate than the vanilla Frank-Wolfe method. We believe that this analysis adds to the growing knowledge of flow analysis for optimization methods, and is a cautionary tale on the ultimate usefulness of multistep methods.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2106.05753,
title = {Continuous Time Frank-Wolfe Does Not Zig-Zag, But Multistep Methods Do Not Accelerate},
author = {Zhaoyue Chen and Mokhwa Lee and Yifan Sun},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.05753},
year = {2022}
}