Candidate
Guilherme Macieira De Araujo | Applied Mathematics, University of Waterloo
Title
Parallel-in-time methods for speeding up optimization algorithms
Abstract
Parallel-in-time methods such as multigrid-reduction-in-time (MGRIT) and parareal utilize an iterative multilevel multigrid structure to solve linear systems of differential equations by solving a coarse-grid problem, which is less costly while also approximating the original, fine-grid problem. Such methods have been successfully applied to speeding up the solution of parabolic PDEs, while more recent developments have shown their capability in also solving some hyperbolic PDEs.
Various iterative optimization algorithms for solving unconstrained minimization problems, such as gradient descent and Nesterov accelerated gradient, take the form of one- or two-step updates. The convergence rates of these algorithms can be extremely slow and, fortuitously, solving them in parallel is equivalent to solving the same exact kind of linear systems to which MGRIT can be applied to. We also note that, for sufficiently small time steps, these algorithms can also be interpreted as discretizations of certain ODEs.
Inspired by these observations, we explore using parallel-in-time methods to parallelize discrete optimization algorithms in order to reduce the wall-clock time required to run them. In this seminar, we also briefly discuss foreseeable challenges, open questions regarding our approach and ideas to better suit these parallel-in-time methods for this application on optimization problems.