Abstract

We propose and analyze a new dynamical system with a closed-loop control law in a Hilbert space [Formula: see text], aiming to shed light on the acceleration phenomenon for monotone inclusion problems, which unifies a broad class of optimization, saddle point, and variational inequality (VI) problems under a single framework. Given an operator [Formula: see text] that is maximal monotone, we propose a closed-loop control system that is governed by the operator [Formula: see text], where a feedback law [Formula: see text] is tuned by the resolution of the algebraic equation [Formula: see text] for some [Formula: see text]. Our first contribution is to prove the existence and uniqueness of a global solution via the Cauchy–Lipschitz theorem. We present a simple Lyapunov function for establishing the weak convergence of trajectories via the Opial lemma and strong convergence results under additional conditions. We then prove a global ergodic convergence rate of [Formula: see text] in terms of a gap function and a global pointwise convergence rate of [Formula: see text] in terms of a residue function. Local linear convergence is established in terms of a distance function under an error bound condition. Further, we provide an algorithmic framework based on the implicit discretization of our system in a Euclidean setting, generalizing the large-step hybrid proximal extragradient framework. Even though the discrete-time analysis is a simplification and generalization of existing analyses for a bounded domain, it is largely motivated by the aforementioned continuous-time analysis, illustrating the fundamental role that the closed-loop control plays in acceleration in monotone inclusion. A highlight of our analysis is a new result concerning [Formula: see text]-order tensor algorithms for monotone inclusion problems, complementing the recent analysis for saddle point and VI problems. Funding: This work was supported in part by the Mathematical Data Science Program of the Office of Naval Research [Grant N00014-18-1-2764] and by the Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship Program [Grant N00014-21-1-2941].

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