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The landscape of the spiked tensor model (1711.05424v2)

Published 15 Nov 2017 in math.ST, math.PR, stat.ML, and stat.TH

Abstract: We consider the problem of estimating a large rank-one tensor ${\boldsymbol u}{\otimes k}\in({\mathbb R}{n}){\otimes k}$, $k\ge 3$ in Gaussian noise. Earlier work characterized a critical signal-to-noise ratio $\lambda_{Bayes}= O(1)$ above which an ideal estimator achieves strictly positive correlation with the unknown vector of interest. Remarkably no polynomial-time algorithm is known that achieved this goal unless $\lambda\ge C n{(k-2)/4}$ and even powerful semidefinite programming relaxations appear to fail for $1\ll \lambda\ll n{(k-2)/4}$. In order to elucidate this behavior, we consider the maximum likelihood estimator, which requires maximizing a degree-$k$ homogeneous polynomial over the unit sphere in $n$ dimensions. We compute the expected number of critical points and local maxima of this objective function and show that it is exponential in the dimensions $n$, and give exact formulas for the exponential growth rate. We show that (for $\lambda$ larger than a constant) critical points are either very close to the unknown vector ${\boldsymbol u}$, or are confined in a band of width $\Theta(\lambda{-1/(k-1)})$ around the maximum circle that is orthogonal to ${\boldsymbol u}$. For local maxima, this band shrinks to be of size $\Theta(\lambda{-1/(k-2)})$. These `uninformative' local maxima are likely to cause the failure of optimization algorithms.

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