Skip to yearly menu bar Skip to main content


Poster

GENO -- GENeric Optimization for Classical Machine Learning

Sören Laue · Matthias Mitterreiter · Joachim Giesen

East Exhibition Hall B, C #181

Keywords: [ Data, Challenges, Implementations, and Software ] [ Software Toolkits ] [ Non-Convex Optimization ] [ Algorithms; Algorithms -> AutoML; Optimization -> Convex Optimization; Optimization ]


Abstract:

Although optimization is the longstanding, algorithmic backbone of machine learning new models still require the time-consuming implementation of new solvers. As a result, there are thousands of implementations of optimization algorithms for machine learning problems. A natural question is, if it is always necessary to implement a new solver, or is there one algorithm that is sufficient for most models. Common belief suggests that such a one-algorithm-fits-all approach cannot work, because this algorithm cannot exploit model specific structure. At least, a generic algorithm cannot be efficient and robust on a wide variety of problems. Here, we challenge this common belief. We have designed and implemented the optimization framework GENO (GENeric Optimization) that combines a modeling language with a generic solver. GENO takes the declaration of an optimization problem and generates a solver for the specified problem class. The framework is flexible enough to encompass most of the classical machine learning problems. We show on a wide variety of classical but also some recently suggested problems that the automatically generated solvers are (1) as efficient as well engineered, specialized solvers, (2) more efficient by a decent margin than recent state-of-the-art solvers, and (3) orders of magnitude more efficient than classical modeling language plus solver approaches.

Live content is unavailable. Log in and register to view live content