Pages that link to "Item:Q5218499"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to Sampling can be faster than optimization (Q5218499):
Displaying 22 items.
- On computational Poisson geometry. II. Numerical methods (Q1983476) (← links)
- Is there an analog of Nesterov acceleration for gradient-based MCMC? (Q2040101) (← links)
- Constrained minimum energy designs (Q2066732) (← links)
- On stochastic mirror descent with interacting particles: convergence properties and variance reduction (Q2077867) (← links)
- Unadjusted Langevin algorithm for sampling a mixture of weakly smooth potentials (Q2083423) (← links)
- Improved bounds for discretization of Langevin diffusions: near-optimal rates without convexity (Q2137032) (← links)
- User-friendly guarantees for the Langevin Monte Carlo with inaccurate gradient (Q2280028) (← links)
- (Q4998932) (← links)
- (Q4999045) (← links)
- Stochastic gradient descent and fast relaxation to thermodynamic equilibrium: A stochastic control approach (Q5020209) (← links)
- Prior normalization for certified likelihood-informed subspace detection of Bayesian inverse problems (Q5044972) (← links)
- (Q5159457) (← links)
- Global Optimization via Schrödinger–Föllmer Diffusion (Q6057791) (← links)
- On the Generalized Langevin Equation for Simulated Annealing (Q6109158) (← links)
- Data augmentation for Bayesian deep learning (Q6122055) (← links)
- Swarm gradient dynamics for global optimization: the mean-field limit case (Q6126662) (← links)
- Distributed event-triggered unadjusted Langevin algorithm for Bayesian learning (Q6136164) (← links)
- Tail probability estimates of continuous-time simulated annealing processes (Q6164089) (← links)
- Multi-index antithetic stochastic gradient algorithm (Q6171790) (← links)
- An entropic approach for Hamiltonian Monte Carlo: the idealized case (Q6590457) (← links)
- Two-layer neural network on infinite-dimensional data: global optimization guarantee in the mean-field regime (Q6611443) (← links)
- Discrete-time simulated annealing: a convergence analysis via the Eyring-Kramers law (Q6668662) (← links)