Title
On the glassy nature of the hard phase in inference problems.
Abstract
An algorithmically hard phase was described in a range of inference problems: even if the signal can be reconstructed with a small error from an information theoretic point of view, known algorithms fail unless the noise-to-signal ratio is sufficiently small. This hard phase is typically understood as a metastable branch of the dynamical evolution of message passing algorithms. In this work we study the metastable branch for a prototypical inference problem, the low-rank matrix factorization, that presents a hard phase. We show that for noise-to-signal ratios that are below the information theoretic threshold, the posterior measure is composed of an exponential number of metastable glassy states and we compute their entropy, called the complexity. We show that this glassiness extends even slightly below the algorithmic threshold below which the well-known approximate message passing (AMP) algorithm is able to closely reconstruct the signal. Counter-intuitively, we find that the performance of the AMP algorithm is not improved by taking into account the glassy nature of the hard phase. This result provides further evidence that the hard phase in inference problems is algorithmically impenetrable for some deep computational reasons that remain to be uncovered.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.1103/physrevx.9.011020
arXiv: Disordered Systems and Neural Networks
Field
DocType
Volume
Statistical physics,Exponential function,Inference,Quantum mechanics,Matrix decomposition,Metastability,Message passing,Mathematics
Journal
abs/1805.05857
Issue
Citations 
PageRank 
1
0
0.34
References 
Authors
16
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Fabrizio Antenucci100.34
Silvio Franz200.34
Pierfrancesco Urbani312.72
Lenka Zdeborová4119078.62