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In this paper, we study decentralized online stochastic non-convex optimization over a network of nodes. Integrating a technique called gradient tracking in decentralized stochastic gradient descent, we show that the resulting algorithm, GT-DSGD, enjoys certain desirable characteristics towards minimizing a sum of smooth non-convex functions. In particular, for general smooth non-convex functions, we establish non-asymptotic characterizations of GT-DSGD and derive the conditions under which it achieves network-independent performances that match the centralized minibatch SGD. In contrast, the existing results suggest that GT-DSGD is always network-dependent and is therefore strictly worse than the centralized minibatch SGD. When the global non-convex function additionally satisfies the Polyak-Lojasiewics (PL) condition, we establish the linear convergence of GT-DSGD up to a steady-state error with appropriate constant step-sizes. Moreover, under stochastic approximation step-sizes, we establish, for the first time, the optimal global sublinear convergence rate on almost every sample path, in addition to the asymptotically optimal sublinear rate in expectation. Since strongly convex functions are a special case of the functions satisfying the PL condition, our results are not only immediately applicable but also improve the currently known best convergence rates and their dependence on problem parameters.
This paper considers decentralized minimization of $N:=nm$ smooth non-convex cost functions equally divided over a directed network of $n$ nodes. Specifically, we describe a stochastic first-order gradient method, called GT-SARAH, that employs a SARA
This paper considers decentralized stochastic optimization over a network of $n$ nodes, where each node possesses a smooth non-convex local cost function and the goal of the networked nodes is to find an $epsilon$-accurate first-order stationary poin
We study decentralized non-convex finite-sum minimization problems described over a network of nodes, where each node possesses a local batch of data samples. In this context, we analyze a single-timescale randomized incremental gradient method, call
In this paper, we consider the problem of distributed online convex optimization, where a network of local agents aim to jointly optimize a convex function over a period of multiple time steps. The agents do not have any information about the future.
In this paper, we demonstrate the power of a widely used stochastic estimator based on moving average (SEMA) on a range of stochastic non-convex optimization problems, which only requires {bf a general unbiased stochastic oracle}. We analyze various