This paper presents a modified ODE-based algorithm for unconstrained optimization problems. It combines the idea of IMPBOT algorithm with nonmonotone and subspace techniques. The main feature of this method is that at each iteration, a lower dimensional system of linear equations is solved to obtain a trial step. Under some standard assumptions, the method is proven to be globally convergent. Numerical results show the efficiency of this proposed method in practical computation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
In this paper, we propose a non-monotone line search multidimensional filter-SQP method for general nonlinear programming based on the Wächter-Biegler methods for nonlinear equality constrained programming. Under mild conditions, the global convergence of the new method is proved. Furthermore, with the non-monotone technique and second order correction step, it is shown that the proposed method does not suffer from the Maratos effect, so that fast local convergence to second order sufficient local solutions is achieved. Numerical results show that the new approach is efficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Hybridizing monotone and nonmonotone approaches, we employ a modified trust region ratio in which more information is provided about the agreement between the exact and the approximate models. Also, we use an adaptive trust region radius as well as two accelerated Armijo-type line search strategies to avoid resolving the trust region subproblem whenever a trial step is rejected. We show that the proposed algorithm is globally and locally superlinearly convergent. Comparative numerical experiments show practical efficiency of the proposed accelerated adaptive trust region algorithm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
MATHEMATICAL bounds, SMOOTHING (Numerical analysis), ALGORITHMS, MATHEMATICAL optimization, APPROXIMATION theory
Abstract
We present a new smaller upper bound for all the elements in the associate generalized Hessian used in the smoothing quadratic regularization (SQR) algorithm proposed by Bian and Chen (SIAM J. Optim. 23: 1718-1741, ). We modify the SQR algorithm by making use of the new upper bound. Numerical results show that our new upper bound improves the performance of the SQR algorithm significantly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]