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The authors propose and analyze a choice of parameters in the multi-parameter regularization of Tikhonov-type: Let \(A\) be a bounded linear operator between Hilbert spaces \(X\), \(Y\). The equation \(Ax= y\) is often ill-posed. Instead of \(y\) only a noisy data \(y_\delta\in Y\), \(\| y-y_\delta\|\leq\delta\) is known. In the two-parameter Tikhonov regularization a solution \(x^\delta(\alpha, \beta)\) is defined as the minimizer of the functional \[ \Phi(\alpha,\beta, x)=\| Ax- y_\delta\|^2+\alpha\| Bx\|^2+\beta\| x\|^2, \] where \(B\) is assumed to be a densely defined unbounded self-adjoint strictly positive operator on \(X\). The goal is to find an a posteriori strategy for choosing the parameter pair \((\alpha,\beta)\) so that the so-called discrepancy principle is fulfilled. The definitions are generalized to multi-parameter \(\alpha_1,\dots, \alpha_e\), \(\beta\) in Chapter 4. A numerical realization of the multi-parameter discrepancy principle is proposed. For a serie of examples the two-parameter regularization is tested against the single-parameter one. Experiments with 3-parameter regularizations are compared with single-parameter regularizations. First kind Fredholm integral equations are studied. The discrepancy curves are given. The discrepancy principle and the model function approximation are applied to the problem of learning from labeled and unlabeled data.
Property / review text: The authors propose and analyze a choice of parameters in the multi-parameter regularization of Tikhonov-type: Let \(A\) be a bounded linear operator between Hilbert spaces \(X\), \(Y\). The equation \(Ax= y\) is often ill-posed. Instead of \(y\) only a noisy data \(y_\delta\in Y\), \(\| y-y_\delta\|\leq\delta\) is known. In the two-parameter Tikhonov regularization a solution \(x^\delta(\alpha, \beta)\) is defined as the minimizer of the functional \[ \Phi(\alpha,\beta, x)=\| Ax- y_\delta\|^2+\alpha\| Bx\|^2+\beta\| x\|^2, \] where \(B\) is assumed to be a densely defined unbounded self-adjoint strictly positive operator on \(X\). The goal is to find an a posteriori strategy for choosing the parameter pair \((\alpha,\beta)\) so that the so-called discrepancy principle is fulfilled. The definitions are generalized to multi-parameter \(\alpha_1,\dots, \alpha_e\), \(\beta\) in Chapter 4. A numerical realization of the multi-parameter discrepancy principle is proposed. For a serie of examples the two-parameter regularization is tested against the single-parameter one. Experiments with 3-parameter regularizations are compared with single-parameter regularizations. First kind Fredholm integral equations are studied. The discrepancy curves are given. The discrepancy principle and the model function approximation are applied to the problem of learning from labeled and unlabeled data. / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by: Werner H. Schmidt / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65J10 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65J20 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 65F22 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 47A52 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 5898910 / rank
 
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ill-posed problem
Property / zbMATH Keywords: ill-posed problem / rank
 
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multi-parameter Tikhonov regularization
Property / zbMATH Keywords: multi-parameter Tikhonov regularization / rank
 
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discrepancy principle
Property / zbMATH Keywords: discrepancy principle / rank
 
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numerical realization
Property / zbMATH Keywords: numerical realization / rank
 
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Multi-parameter regularization and its numerical realization
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    Multi-parameter regularization and its numerical realization (English)
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    23 May 2011
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    The authors propose and analyze a choice of parameters in the multi-parameter regularization of Tikhonov-type: Let \(A\) be a bounded linear operator between Hilbert spaces \(X\), \(Y\). The equation \(Ax= y\) is often ill-posed. Instead of \(y\) only a noisy data \(y_\delta\in Y\), \(\| y-y_\delta\|\leq\delta\) is known. In the two-parameter Tikhonov regularization a solution \(x^\delta(\alpha, \beta)\) is defined as the minimizer of the functional \[ \Phi(\alpha,\beta, x)=\| Ax- y_\delta\|^2+\alpha\| Bx\|^2+\beta\| x\|^2, \] where \(B\) is assumed to be a densely defined unbounded self-adjoint strictly positive operator on \(X\). The goal is to find an a posteriori strategy for choosing the parameter pair \((\alpha,\beta)\) so that the so-called discrepancy principle is fulfilled. The definitions are generalized to multi-parameter \(\alpha_1,\dots, \alpha_e\), \(\beta\) in Chapter 4. A numerical realization of the multi-parameter discrepancy principle is proposed. For a serie of examples the two-parameter regularization is tested against the single-parameter one. Experiments with 3-parameter regularizations are compared with single-parameter regularizations. First kind Fredholm integral equations are studied. The discrepancy curves are given. The discrepancy principle and the model function approximation are applied to the problem of learning from labeled and unlabeled data.
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    ill-posed problem
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    multi-parameter Tikhonov regularization
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    discrepancy principle
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    numerical realization
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