Abstract

The standard linear regression (SLR) problem is to recover a vector x0 from noisy linear observations y = Ax0 + w. The approximate message passing (AMP) algorithm recently proposed by Donoho, Maleki, and Montanari is a computationally efficient iterative approach to SLR that has a remarkable property: for large i.i.d. sub-Gaussian matrices A, its periteration behavior is rigorously characterized by a scalar stateevolution whose fixed points, when unique, are Bayes optimal. AMP, however, is fragile in that even small deviations from the i.i.d. sub-Gaussian model can cause the algorithm to diverge. This paper considers a “vector AMP” (VAMP) algorithm and shows that VAMP has a rigorous scalar state-evolution that holds under a much broader class of large random matrices A: those that are right-rotationally invariant. After performing an initial singular value decomposition (SVD) of A, the per-iteration complexity of VAMP is similar to that of AMP. In addition, the fixed points of VAMP's state evolution are consistent with the replica prediction of the minimum mean-squared error recently derived by Tulino, Caire, Verdu, and Shamai.

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