Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
125 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
53 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
42 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
4 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
47 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

Approximating Operator Norms via Generalized Krivine Rounding (1804.03644v2)

Published 10 Apr 2018 in cs.DS and math.FA

Abstract: We consider the $(\ell_p,\ell_r)$-Grothendieck problem, which seeks to maximize the bilinear form $yT A x$ for an input matrix $A$ over vectors $x,y$ with $|x|p=|y|_r=1$. The problem is equivalent to computing the $p \to r*$ operator norm of $A$. The case $p=r=\infty$ corresponds to the classical Grothendieck problem. Our main result is an algorithm for arbitrary $p,r \ge 2$ with approximation ratio $(1+\epsilon_0)/(\sinh{-1}(1)\cdot \gamma{p*} \,\gamma_{r*})$ for some fixed $\epsilon_0 \le 0.00863$. Comparing this with Krivine's approximation ratio of $(\pi/2)/\sinh{-1}(1)$ for the original Grothendieck problem, our guarantee is off from the best known hardness factor of $(\gamma_{p*} \gamma_{r*}){-1}$ for the problem by a factor similar to Krivine's defect. Our approximation follows by bounding the value of the natural vector relaxation for the problem which is convex when $p,r \ge 2$. We give a generalization of random hyperplane rounding and relate the performance of this rounding to certain hypergeometric functions, which prescribe necessary transformations to the vector solution before the rounding is applied. Unlike Krivine's Rounding where the relevant hypergeometric function was $\arcsin$, we have to study a family of hypergeometric functions. The bulk of our technical work then involves methods from complex analysis to gain detailed information about the Taylor series coefficients of the inverses of these hypergeometric functions, which then dictate our approximation factor. Our result also implies improved bounds for "factorization through $\ell_{2}{\,n}$" of operators from $\ell_{p}{\,n}$ to $\ell_{q}{\,m}$ (when $p\geq 2 \geq q$)--- such bounds are of significant interest in functional analysis and our work provides modest supplementary evidence for an intriguing parallel between factorizability, and constant-factor approximability.

Citations (7)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.