Global optimization explained

Global optimization is a branch of applied mathematics and numerical analysis that attempts to find the global minima or maxima of a function or a set of functions on a given set. It is usually described as a minimization problem because the maximization of the real-valued function

g(x)

is equivalent to the minimization of the function

f(x):=(-1)g(x)

.

Given a possibly nonlinear and non-convex continuous function

f:\Omega\subsetRn\toR

with the global minima

f*

and the set of all global minimizers

X*

in

\Omega

, the standard minimization problem can be given as

minx\in\Omegaf(x),

that is, finding

f*

and a global minimizer in

X*

; where

\Omega

is a (not necessarily convex) compact set defined by inequalities

gi(x)\geqslant0,i=1,\ldots,r

.

Global optimization is distinguished from local optimization by its focus on finding the minimum or maximum over the given set, as opposed to finding local minima or maxima. Finding an arbitrary local minimum is relatively straightforward by using classical local optimization methods. Finding the global minimum of a function is far more difficult: analytical methods are frequently not applicable, and the use of numerical solution strategies often leads to very hard challenges.

Applications

Typical examples of global optimization applications include:

Deterministic methods

See main article: article and Deterministic global optimization. The most successful general exact strategies are:

Inner and outer approximation

In both of these strategies, the set over which a function is to be optimized is approximated by polyhedra. In inner approximation, the polyhedra are contained in the set, while in outer approximation, the polyhedra contain the set.

Cutting-plane methods

See main article: article and Cutting plane. The cutting-plane method is an umbrella term for optimization methods which iteratively refine a feasible set or objective function by means of linear inequalities, termed cuts. Such procedures are popularly used to find integer solutions to mixed integer linear programming (MILP) problems, as well as to solve general, not necessarily differentiable convex optimization problems. The use of cutting planes to solve MILP was introduced by Ralph E. Gomory and Václav Chvátal.

Branch and bound methods

See main article: article and Branch and bound. Branch and bound (BB or B&B) is an algorithm design paradigm for discrete and combinatorial optimization problems. A branch-and-bound algorithm consists of a systematic enumeration of candidate solutions by means of state space search: the set of candidate solutions is thought of as forming a rooted tree with the full set at the root. The algorithm explores branches of this tree, which represent subsets of the solution set. Before enumerating the candidate solutions of a branch, the branch is checked against upper and lower estimated bounds on the optimal solution, and is discarded if it cannot produce a better solution than the best one found so far by the algorithm.

Interval methods

See main article: article, Interval arithmetic and Set inversion. Interval arithmetic, interval mathematics, interval analysis, or interval computation, is a method developed by mathematicians since the 1950s and 1960s as an approach to putting bounds on rounding errors and measurement errors in mathematical computation and thus developing numerical methods that yield reliable results. Interval arithmetic helps find reliable and guaranteed solutions to equations and optimization problems.

Methods based on real algebraic geometry

See main article: article and Real algebraic geometry. Real algebra is the part of algebra which is relevant to real algebraic (and semialgebraic) geometry. It is mostly concerned with the study of ordered fields and ordered rings (in particular real closed fields) and their applications to the study of positive polynomials and sums-of-squares of polynomials. It can be used in convex optimization

Stochastic methods

See main article: article and Stochastic optimization.

Several exact or inexact Monte-Carlo-based algorithms exist:

Direct Monte-Carlo sampling

See main article: article and Monte Carlo method. In this method, random simulations are used to find an approximate solution.

Example: The traveling salesman problem is what is called a conventional optimization problem. That is, all the facts (distances between each destination point) needed to determine the optimal path to follow are known with certainty and the goal is to run through the possible travel choices to come up with the one with the lowest total distance. However, let's assume that instead of wanting to minimize the total distance traveled to visit each desired destination, we wanted to minimize the total time needed to reach each destination. This goes beyond conventional optimization since travel time is inherently uncertain (traffic jams, time of day, etc.). As a result, to determine our optimal path we would want to use simulation - optimization to first understand the range of potential times it could take to go from one point to another (represented by a probability distribution in this case rather than a specific distance) and then optimize our travel decisions to identify the best path to follow taking that uncertainty into account.

Stochastic tunneling

See main article: article and Stochastic tunneling. Stochastic tunneling (STUN) is an approach to global optimization based on the Monte Carlo method-sampling of the function to be objectively minimized in which the function is nonlinearly transformed to allow for easier tunneling among regions containing function minima. Easier tunneling allows for faster exploration of sample space and faster convergence to a good solution.

Parallel tempering

See main article: article and Parallel tempering. Parallel tempering, also known as replica exchange MCMC sampling, is a simulation method aimed at improving the dynamic properties of Monte Carlo method simulations of physical systems, and of Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling methods more generally. The replica exchange method was originally devised by Swendsen,[1] then extended by Geyer[2] and later developed, among others, by Giorgio Parisi.,[3] [4] Sugita and Okamoto formulated a molecular dynamics version of parallel tempering:[5] this is usually known as replica-exchange molecular dynamics or REMD.

Essentially, one runs N copies of the system, randomly initialized, at different temperatures. Then, based on the Metropolis criterion one exchanges configurations at different temperatures. The idea of this methodis to make configurations at high temperatures available to the simulations at low temperatures and vice versa.This results in a very robust ensemble which is able to sample both low and high energy configurations.In this way, thermodynamical properties such as the specific heat, which is in general not well computed in the canonical ensemble, can be computed with great precision.

Heuristics and metaheuristics

See main article: Metaheuristic.

Other approaches include heuristic strategies to search the search space in a more or less intelligent way, including:

Response surface methodology-based approaches

See also

References

Deterministic global optimization:

For simulated annealing:

For reactive search optimization:

For stochastic methods:

For parallel tempering:

For continuation methods:

For general considerations on the dimensionality of the domain of definition of the objective function:

For strategies allowing one to compare deterministic and stochastic global optimization methods

External links

Notes and References

  1. Swendsen RH and Wang JS (1986) Replica Monte Carlo simulation of spin glasses Physical Review Letters 57 : 2607–2609
  2. C. J. Geyer, (1991) in Computing Science and Statistics, Proceedings of the 23rd Symposium on the Interface, American Statistical Association, New York, p. 156.
  3. Marco Falcioni and Michael W. Deem . 1999 . A Biased Monte Carlo Scheme for Zeolite Structure Solution . J. Chem. Phys. . 110 . 3 . 1754–1766 . 10.1063/1.477812. cond-mat/9809085. 1999JChPh.110.1754F. 13963102 .
  4. David J. Earl and Michael W. Deem (2005) "Parallel tempering: Theory, applications, and new perspectives", Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 7, 3910
  5. Y. Sugita and Y. Okamoto . 1999 . Replica-exchange molecular dynamics method for protein folding . Chemical Physics Letters . 314 . 1–2 . 141–151 . 10.1016/S0009-2614(99)01123-9. 1999CPL...314..141S.
  6. Book: Neil . Thacker . Tim . Cootes . http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/rbf/CVonline/LOCAL_COPIES/BMVA96Tut/node29.html . Graduated Non-Convexity and Multi-Resolution Optimization Methods . Vision Through Optimization . 1996.
  7. Book: Andrew . Blake . Andrew . Zisserman . Visual Reconstruction . MIT Press . 1987 . 0-262-02271-0.
  8. Hossein Mobahi, John W. Fisher III. On the Link Between Gaussian Homotopy Continuation and Convex Envelopes, In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (EMMCVPR 2015), Springer, 2015.
  9. Jonas Mockus (2013). Bayesian approach to global optimization: theory and applications. Kluwer Academic.