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Autores principales: Yang, Qing-Mei, Zhang, Da-Qing
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16066
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author Yang, Qing-Mei
Zhang, Da-Qing
author_facet Yang, Qing-Mei
Zhang, Da-Qing
contents This paper introduces a novel variational Bayesian method that integrates Tucker decomposition for efficient high-dimensional inverse problem solving. The method reduces computational complexity by transforming variational inference from a high-dimensional space to a lower-dimensional core tensor space via Tucker decomposition. A key innovation is the introduction of per-mode precision parameters, enabling adaptive regularization for anisotropic structures. For instance, in directional image deblurring, learned parameters align with physical anisotropy, applying stronger regularization to critical directions (e.g., row vs. column axes). The method further estimates noise levels from data, eliminating reliance on prior knowledge of noise parameters (unlike conventional benchmarks such as the discrepancy principle (DP)). Experimental evaluations across 2D deblurring, 3D heat conduction, and Fredholm integral equations demonstrate consistent improvements in quantitative metrics (PSNR, SSIM) and qualitative visualizations (error maps, precision parameter trends) compared to L-curve criterion, generalized cross-validation (GCV), unbiased predictive risk estimator (UPRE), and DP. The approach scales to problems with 110,000 variables and outperforms existing methods by 0.73-2.09 dB in deblurring tasks and 6.75 dB in 3D heat conduction. Limitations include sensitivity to rank selection in Tucker decomposition and the need for theoretical analysis. Future work will explore automated rank selection and theoretical guarantees. This method bridges Bayesian theory and scalable computation, offering practical solutions for large-scale inverse problems in imaging, remote sensing, and scientific computing.
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spellingShingle Adaptive regularization parameter selection for high-dimensional inverse problems: A Bayesian approach with Tucker low-rank constraints
Yang, Qing-Mei
Zhang, Da-Qing
Machine Learning
This paper introduces a novel variational Bayesian method that integrates Tucker decomposition for efficient high-dimensional inverse problem solving. The method reduces computational complexity by transforming variational inference from a high-dimensional space to a lower-dimensional core tensor space via Tucker decomposition. A key innovation is the introduction of per-mode precision parameters, enabling adaptive regularization for anisotropic structures. For instance, in directional image deblurring, learned parameters align with physical anisotropy, applying stronger regularization to critical directions (e.g., row vs. column axes). The method further estimates noise levels from data, eliminating reliance on prior knowledge of noise parameters (unlike conventional benchmarks such as the discrepancy principle (DP)). Experimental evaluations across 2D deblurring, 3D heat conduction, and Fredholm integral equations demonstrate consistent improvements in quantitative metrics (PSNR, SSIM) and qualitative visualizations (error maps, precision parameter trends) compared to L-curve criterion, generalized cross-validation (GCV), unbiased predictive risk estimator (UPRE), and DP. The approach scales to problems with 110,000 variables and outperforms existing methods by 0.73-2.09 dB in deblurring tasks and 6.75 dB in 3D heat conduction. Limitations include sensitivity to rank selection in Tucker decomposition and the need for theoretical analysis. Future work will explore automated rank selection and theoretical guarantees. This method bridges Bayesian theory and scalable computation, offering practical solutions for large-scale inverse problems in imaging, remote sensing, and scientific computing.
title Adaptive regularization parameter selection for high-dimensional inverse problems: A Bayesian approach with Tucker low-rank constraints
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.16066