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HOGWILD!-Gibbs Can Be PanAccurate

NeurIPS

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Published on

12/08/2018

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NeurIPS

Asynchronous Gibbs sampling has been recently shown to be fast-mixing and an accurate method for estimating probabilities of events on a small number of variables of a graphical model satisfying Dobrushin’s condition [DSOR16]. We investigate whether it can be used to accurately estimate expectations of functions of all the variables of the model. Under the same condition, we show that the synchronous (sequential) and asynchronous Gibbs samplers can be coupled so that the expected Hamming distance between their (multivariate) samples remains bounded by O(τ log n), where n is the number of variables in the graphical model, and τ is a measure of the asynchronicity. A similar bound holds for any constant power of the Hamming distance. Hence, the expectation of any function that is Lipschitz with respect to a power of the Hamming distance, can be estimated with a bias that grows logarithmically in n. Going beyond Lipschitz functions, we consider the bias arising from asynchronicity in estimating the expectation of polynomial functions of all variables in the model. Using recent concentration of measure results [DDK17, GLP17, GSS18], we show that the bias introduced by the asynchronicity is of smaller order than the standard deviation of the function value already present in the true model. We perform experiments on a multiprocessor machine to empirically illustrate our theoretical findings.

Please cite our work using the BibTeX below.

@inproceedings{NEURIPS2018_a5bfc9e0,
 author = {Daskalakis, Constantinos and Dikkala, Nishanth and Jayanti, Siddhartha},
 booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
 editor = {S. Bengio and H. Wallach and H. Larochelle and K. Grauman and N. Cesa-Bianchi and R. Garnett},
 pages = {},
 publisher = {Curran Associates, Inc.},
 title = {HOGWILD!-Gibbs can be PanAccurate},
 url = {https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2018/file/a5bfc9e07964f8dddeb95fc584cd965d-Paper.pdf},
 volume = {31},
 year = {2018}
}
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