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The True Cost of Stochastic Gradient Langevin Dynamics (1706.02692v1)

Published 8 Jun 2017 in stat.ME and math.NA

Abstract: The problem of posterior inference is central to Bayesian statistics and a wealth of Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods have been proposed to obtain asymptotically correct samples from the posterior. As datasets in applications grow larger and larger, scalability has emerged as a central problem for MCMC methods. Stochastic Gradient Langevin Dynamics (SGLD) and related stochastic gradient Markov Chain Monte Carlo methods offer scalability by using stochastic gradients in each step of the simulated dynamics. While these methods are asymptotically unbiased if the stepsizes are reduced in an appropriate fashion, in practice constant stepsizes are used. This introduces a bias that is often ignored. In this paper we study the mean squared error of Lipschitz functionals in strongly log- concave models with i.i.d. data of growing data set size and show that, given a batchsize, to control the bias of SGLD the stepsize has to be chosen so small that the computational cost of reaching a target accuracy is roughly the same for all batchsizes. Using a control variate approach, the cost can be reduced dramatically. The analysis is performed by considering the algorithms as noisy discretisations of the Langevin SDE which correspond to the Euler method if the full data set is used. An important observation is that the 1scale of the step size is determined by the stability criterion if the accuracy is required for consistent credible intervals. Experimental results confirm our theoretical findings.

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