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Data assisted reconstruction algorithms, incorporating trained neural networks, are a novel paradigm for solving inverse problems. One approach is to first apply a classical reconstruction method and then apply a neural network to improve its solution. Empirical evidence shows that such two-step methods provide high-quality reconstructions, but they lack a convergence analysis. In this paper we formalize the use of such two-step approaches with classical regularization theory. We propose data-consistent neural networks that we combine with classical regularization methods. This yields a data-driven regularization method for which we provide a full convergence analysis with respect to noise. Numerical simulations show that compared to standard two-step deep learning methods, our approach provides better stability with respect to structural changes in the test set, while performing similarly on test data similar to the training set. Our method provides a stable solution of inverse problems that exploits both the known nonlinear forward model as well as the desired solution manifold from data.
This paper analyzes the generalization error of two-layer neural networks for computing the ground state of the Schrodinger operator on a $d$-dimensional hypercube. We prove that the convergence rate of the generalization error is independent of the
Building on the well-known total-variation (TV), this paper develops a general regularization technique based on nonlinear isotropic diffusion (NID) for inverse problems with piecewise smooth solutions. The novelty of our approach is to be adaptive (
Recent works have shown that deep neural networks can be employed to solve partial differential equations, giving rise to the framework of physics informed neural networks. We introduce a generalization for these methods that manifests as a scaling p
We present a novel algorithm based on the ensemble Kalman filter to solve inverse problems involving multiscale elliptic partial differential equations. Our method is based on numerical homogenization and finite element discretization and allows to r
With a quite different way to determine the working rows, we propose a novel greedy Kaczmarz method for solving consistent linear systems. Convergence analysis of the new method is provided. Numerical experiments show that, for the same accuracy, our