In this work, a new stabilization scheme for the Gauss-Newton method is defined, where the minimum norm solution of the linear least-squares problem is normally taken as search direction and the standard Gauss-Newton equation is suitably modified only at a subsequence of the iterates. Moreover, the stepsize is computed by means of a nonmonotone line search technique. The global convergence of the proposed algorithm model is proved under standard assumptions and the superlinear rate of convergence is ensured for the zero-residual case. A specific implementation algorithm is described, where the use of the pure Gauss-Newton iteration is conditioned to the progress made in the minimization process by controlling the stepsize. The results of a computational experimentation performed on a set of standard test problems are reported.
Use of the minimum-norm search direction in a nonmonotone version of the Gauss-Newton method / Lampariello, F.; Sciandrone, M.. - In: JOURNAL OF OPTIMIZATION THEORY AND APPLICATIONS. - ISSN 0022-3239. - 119:1(2003), pp. 65-82. [10.1023/B:JOTA.0000005041.99777.af]
Use of the minimum-norm search direction in a nonmonotone version of the Gauss-Newton method
Sciandrone M.
2003
Abstract
In this work, a new stabilization scheme for the Gauss-Newton method is defined, where the minimum norm solution of the linear least-squares problem is normally taken as search direction and the standard Gauss-Newton equation is suitably modified only at a subsequence of the iterates. Moreover, the stepsize is computed by means of a nonmonotone line search technique. The global convergence of the proposed algorithm model is proved under standard assumptions and the superlinear rate of convergence is ensured for the zero-residual case. A specific implementation algorithm is described, where the use of the pure Gauss-Newton iteration is conditioned to the progress made in the minimization process by controlling the stepsize. The results of a computational experimentation performed on a set of standard test problems are reported.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.