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Basis pursuit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Basis pursuit is the mathematical optimization problem of the form

where x is a N-dimensional solution vector (signal), y is a M-dimensional vector of observations (measurements), A is a M × N transform matrix (usually measurement matrix) and M < N.

It is usually applied in cases where there is an underdetermined system of linear equations y = Ax that must be exactly satisfied, and the sparsest solution in the L1 sense is desired.

When it is desirable to trade off exact equality of Ax and y in exchange for a sparser x, basis pursuit denoising is preferred.

Basis pursuit problems can be converted to linear programming problems in polynomial time and vice versa, making the two types of problems polynomially equivalent.[1]

Equivalence to Linear Programming

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A basis pursuit problem can be converted to a linear programming problem by first noting that

where . This construction is derived from the constraint , where the value of is intended to be stored in or depending on whether is greater or less than zero, respectively. Although a range of and values can potentially satisfy this constraint, solvers using the simplex algorithm will find solutions where one or both of or is zero, resulting in the relation .

From this expansion, the problem can be recast in canonical form as:[1]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b A. M. Tillmann Equivalence of Linear Programming and Basis Pursuit, PAMM (Proceedings in Applied Mathematics and Mechanics) Volume 15, 2015, pp. 735-738, DOI: 10.1002/PAMM.201510351

References & further reading

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  • Stephen Boyd, Lieven Vandenbergh: Convex Optimization, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 9780521833783, pp. 337–337
  • Simon Foucart, Holger Rauhut: A Mathematical Introduction to Compressive Sensing. Springer, 2013, ISBN 9780817649487, pp. 77–110
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