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Bilevel optimization has become a powerful framework in various machine learning applications including meta-learning, hyperparameter optimization, and network architecture search. There are generally two classes of bilevel optimization formulations for machine learning: 1) problem-based bilevel optimization, whose inner-level problem is formulated as finding a minimizer of a given loss function; and 2) algorithm-based bilevel optimization, whose inner-level solution is an output of a fixed algorithm. For the first class, two popular types of gradient-based algorithms have been proposed for hypergradient estimation via approximate implicit differentiation (AID) and iterative differentiation (ITD). Algorithms for the second class include the popular model-agnostic meta-learning (MAML) and almost no inner loop (ANIL). However, the convergence rate and fundamental limitations of bilevel optimization algorithms have not been well explored. This thesis provides a comprehensive convergence rate analysis for bilevel algorithms in the aforementioned two classes. We further propose principled algorithm designs for bilevel optimization with higher efficiency and scalability. For the problem-based formulation, we provide a convergence rate analysis for AID- and ITD-based bilevel algorithms. We then develop acceleration bilevel algorithms, for which we provide shaper convergence analysis with relaxed assumptions. We also provide the first lower bounds for bilevel optimization, and establish the optimality by providing matching upper bounds under certain conditions. We finally propose new stochastic bilevel optimization algorithms with lower complexity and higher efficiency in practice. For the algorithm-based formulation, we develop a theoretical convergence for general multi-step MAML and ANIL, and characterize the impact of parameter selections and loss geometries on the their complexities.
Bilevel optimization has arisen as a powerful tool for many machine learning problems such as meta-learning, hyperparameter optimization, and reinforcement learning. In this paper, we investigate the nonconvex-strongly-convex bilevel optimization pro
Bilevel optimization has been widely applied in many important machine learning applications such as hyperparameter optimization and meta-learning. Recently, several momentum-based algorithms have been proposed to solve bilevel optimization problems
Bilevel optimization has recently attracted growing interests due to its wide applications in modern machine learning problems. Although recent studies have characterized the convergence rate for several such popular algorithms, it is still unclear h
We investigate 1) the rate at which refined properties of the empirical risk---in particular, gradients---converge to their population counterparts in standard non-convex learning tasks, and 2) the consequences of this convergence for optimization. O
Bilevel optimization problems are at the center of several important machine learning problems such as hyperparameter tuning, data denoising, meta- and few-shot learning, and training-data poisoning. Different from simultaneous or multi-objective opt