Title
Smoothed Analysis of Belief Propagation for Minimum-Cost Flow and Matching.
Abstract
Belief propagation (BP) is a message-passing heuristic for statistical inference in graphical models such as Bayesian networks and Markov random fields. BP is used to compute marginal distributions or maximum likelihood assignments and has applications in many areas, including machine learning, image processing, and computer vision. However, the theoretical understanding of the performance of BP is unsatisfactory. Recently, BP has been applied to combinatorial optimization problems. It has been proved that BP can be used to compute maximum-weight matchings and minimum-cost flows for instances with a unique optimum. The number of iterations needed for this is pseudo-polynomial and hence BP is not efficient in general. We study belief propagation in the framework of smoothed analysis and prove that with high probability the number of iterations needed to compute maximum-weight matchings and minimum-cost flows is bounded by a polynomial if the weights/costs of the edges are randomly perturbed. To prove our upper bounds, we use an isolation lemma by Beier and V\"{o}cking (SIAM J. Comput. 2006) for matching and generalize an isolation lemma for min-cost flow by Gamarnik, Shah, and Wei (Operations Research, 2012). We also prove almost matching lower tail bounds for the number of iterations that BP needs to converge.
Year
Venue
DocType
2012
J. Graph Algorithms Appl.
Journal
Volume
Issue
Citations 
17
6
2
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.37
5
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Tobias Brunsch1394.49
Kamiel Cornelissen242.08
Bodo Manthey3224.40
Heiko Röglin451436.38