From: Jean-François Couchot Date: Thu, 5 Dec 2013 13:33:46 +0000 (+0100) Subject: beaucoup decourbes X-Git-Url: https://bilbo.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/and/gitweb/desynchronisation-controle.git/commitdiff_plain/e6cd9df3d469f7916d513610d3bc22ab055f790a?ds=inline beaucoup decourbes --- diff --git a/IWCMC14/HLG.tex b/IWCMC14/HLG.tex index 998f94b..86ebbc2 100644 --- a/IWCMC14/HLG.tex +++ b/IWCMC14/HLG.tex @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ An example of a sensor network of size 10. All nodes are video sensors (depicted as small discs) except the 9 one which is the sink (depicted as a rectangle). -Large lircles represent the maximum +Large circles represent the maximum transmission range which is set to 20 in a square region which is $50 m \times 50 m$. \end{scriptsize} @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ graph. In this one, the nodes, in a set $N$, are sensors, links, or the sink. Furthermore, there is an edge from $i$ to $j$ if $i$ can -send a message to $j$, \textit{i. e.}, the distance betwween +send a message to $j$, \textit{i. e.}, the distance between $i$ and $j$ is less than a given maximum transmission range. All the possible edges are stored into a sequence @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ Let $V \subset N $ be the set of the video sensors of $N$. Let thus $R_h$, $R_h \geq 0$, be the encoding rate of video sensor $h$, $h \in V$. Let $\eta_{hi}$ be the rate inside the node $i$ -of the production that has beeninitiated by $h$. More precisely, we have +of the production that has been initiated by $h$. More precisely, we have $ \eta_{hi}$ is equal to $ R_h$ if $i$ is $h$, is equal to $-R_h$ if $i$ is the sink, and $0$ otherwise. @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ is $ \eta_{hi} = \sum_{l \in L }a_{il}x_{hl} $. The encoding power of the $i$ node is $P_{si}$, $P_{si} > 0$. -The emmission distortion of the $i$ node is +The emission distortion of the $i$ node is $\sigma^2 e^{-\gamma . R_i.P_{si}^{}2/3}$ where $\sigma^2$ is the average input variance and $\gamma$ is the encoding efficiency coefficient. @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ The initial energy of the $i$ node is $B_i$. The transmission consumed power of node $i$ is $P_{ti} = c_l^s.y_l$ where $c_l^s$ is the transmission energy consumption cost of link $l$, $l\in L$. This cost is defined -as foolows: $c_l^s = \alpha +\beta.d_l^{n_p} $ where +as follows: $c_l^s = \alpha +\beta.d_l^{n_p} $ where $d_l$ represents the distance of the link $l$, $\alpha$, $\beta$, and $n_p$ are constant. The reception consumed power of node $i$ is @@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ P_{si}+ \sum_{l \in L}a_{il}^{+}.c^s_l.\left( \sum_{h \in V}x_{hl} \right) \\ \end{array} $$ and where the following constraint is added -$$ $q_i > 0, \forall i \in N $$ +$q_i > 0, \forall i \in N$. @@ -131,17 +131,17 @@ The authors then apply a classical dual based approach with Lagrange multiplier to solve such a problem~\cite{}. They first introduce dual variables $u_{hi}$, $v_{h}$, $\lambda_{i}$, and $w_l$ for any -$h \in V$,$ i \in N$, and $l \in L$. +$h \in V$, $ i \in N$, and $l \in L$. \begin{equation} \begin{array}{l} L(R,x,P_{s},q,u,v,\lambda,w)=\\ -\sum_{i \in N} q_i^2 + q_i. \left( -\sum_{l \in L } a_{il}w_l^{(k)}- +\sum_{i \in N} \left( q_i^2 + q_i. \left( +\sum_{l \in L } a_{il}w_l- \lambda_iB_i -\right)\\ -+ \sum_{h \in V} -v_h.\dfrac{\ln(\sigma^2/D_h)}{\gamma P_{sh} ^{2/3}} + \lambda_h P_{sh}\\ +\right)\right) \\ ++ \sum_{h \in V} \left( +v_h.\dfrac{\ln(\sigma^2/D_h)}{\gamma P_{sh} ^{2/3}} + \lambda_h P_{sh} \right)\\ + \sum_{h \in V} \sum_{l\in L} \left( \delta.x_{hl}^2 \right.\\ @@ -153,10 +153,11 @@ c^r. a_{il}^{-} ) \right.\\ \left.\left. u_{hi} a_{il} \right) \right)\\ - + \sum_{h \in V} + + \sum_{h \in V} \left( \delta R_{h}^2 --v_h.R_{h} - \sum_{i \in N} u_{hi}\eta_{hi} +-v_h.R_{h} - \sum_{i \in N} u_{hi}\eta_{hi}\right) \end{array} +\label{eq:dualFunction} \end{equation} The proposed algorithm iteratively computes the following variables @@ -169,21 +170,21 @@ $v_{h}^{(k+1)}= \max\left\{0,v_{h}^{(k)} - \theta^{(k)}.\left( R_h^{(k)} - \dfr \item $\begin{array}{l} \lambda_{i}^{(k+1)} = \max\left\{0, \lambda_{i}^{(k)} - \theta^{(k)}.\left( - q^{(k)}.B_i \right. \right.\\ - \qquad\qquad\qquad -\sum_{l \in L}a_{il}^{+}.c^s_l.\left( \sum_{h \in V}x_{hl}^{(k)} \right) \\ - \qquad\qquad\qquad - \left.\left. \sum_{l \in L} a_{il}^{-}.c^r.\left( \sum_{h \in V}x_{hl}^{(k)} \right) - P_{si}^{(k)} \right) \right\} + q^{(k)}.B_i - P_{si}^{(k)} \right. \right.\\ + \qquad\qquad\qquad -\sum_{l \in L}a_{il}^{+}.c^s_l. \sum_{h \in V}x_{hl}^{(k)} \\ + \qquad\qquad\qquad - \left.\left. c^r.\sum_{l \in L} a_{il}^{-}. \sum_{h \in V}x_{hl}^{(k)} \right) \right\} \end{array} $ \item -$w_l^{(k+1)} = w_l^{(k+1)} + \theta^{(k)}. \left( \sum_{i \in N} a_{il}.q_i^{(k)} \right)$ +$w_l^{(k+1)} = w_l^{(k+1)} + \theta^{(k)}. \sum_{i \in N} a_{il}.q_i^{(k)} $ \item -$\theta^{(k)} = \omega / t^{1/2}$ +$\theta^{(k)} = \omega / k^{1/2}$ \item -$q_i^{(k)} = \arg\min_{q_i>0} +$q_i^{(k+1)} = \arg\min_{q_i>0} \left( q_i^2 + q_i. \left( @@ -194,7 +195,7 @@ q_i^2 + q_i. \item \label{item:psh} $ -P_{sh}^{(k)} +P_{sh}^{(k+1)} = \arg \min_{p > 0} \left( @@ -204,7 +205,7 @@ $ \item $ -R_h^{(k)} +R_h^{(k+1)} = \arg \min_{r \geq 0 } \left( @@ -214,7 +215,7 @@ R_h^{(k)} $ \item $ -x_{hl}^{(k)} = +x_{hl}^{(k+1)} = \begin{array}{l} \arg \min_{x \geq 0} \left( @@ -230,5 +231,4 @@ c^r. a_{il}^{-} ) \right.\\ \end{array} $ \end{enumerate} -where the first four elements are dual variable and the last four ones are -primal ones. \ No newline at end of file +for any $h \in V$, $i \in N$, and $l \in L$. diff --git a/IWCMC14/argmin.tex b/IWCMC14/argmin.tex index 47eae44..be684d4 100644 --- a/IWCMC14/argmin.tex +++ b/IWCMC14/argmin.tex @@ -7,21 +7,25 @@ the L-BFGS-B algorithm~\cite{byrd1995limited}, the truncated Newton algorithm, the Constrained Optimization BY Linear Approximation (COBYLA) method~\cite{ANU:1770520}. However, all these methods suffer from being iterative approaches -and need many steps of computation to obtain an approximation -of the minimal value. This approach is dramatic whilst the objective is to -reduce all the computation steps. +each iteration including many steps of computation to obtain an approximation +of the minimal value. +This approach is dramatic since the objective is to +reduce all the computation steps to increase the network lifetime. A closer look to each function that has to be minimized shows that it is differentiable and the minimal value can be computed in only one step. The table~\ref{table:min} presents these minimal value for each primal variable. +Thanks to this formal calculus, computing the +new iterate of each primal variable only requires +one computation step. \begin{table*}[t] $$ \begin{array}{|l|l|l|} \hline -q_i^{(k)} & - \arg\min_{q_i>0} +q_i^{(k+1)} & + \arg\min_{q>0} \left( q^2 + q. \left( @@ -30,35 +34,35 @@ q^2 + q. \right) \right) & -\max \left(\epsilon,\dfrac{\sum_{l \in L } a_{il}w_l^{(k)}- -\lambda_i^{(k)}B_i}{2}\right) \\ +\max \left\{\epsilon,\dfrac{\sum_{l \in L } a_{il}w_l^{(k)}- +\lambda_i^{(k)}B_i}{2}\right\} \\ \hline -P_{sh}^{(k)}& +P_{sh}^{(k+1)}& \arg \min_{p > 0} \left( v_h^{(k)}.\dfrac{\ln(\sigma^2/D_h)}{\gamma p^{2/3}} + \lambda_h^{(k)}p + \delta_p p^{8/3} \right) & -\max \left(\epsilon, +\max \left\{\epsilon, \left( \dfrac{ -\lambda_h^{(k)} + \sqrt{(\lambda_h^{(k)})^2 + \dfrac{64}{9}\alpha} }{\frac{16}{3}\delta_p} \right)^{\frac{3}{5}} -\right) \\ +\right\} \\ \hline -R_h^{(k)} +R_h^{(k+1)} & \arg \min_{r \geq 0 } \left( \delta_r r^2 -v_h^{(k)}.r - \sum_{i \in N} u_{hi}^{(k)} \eta_{hi} \right) & -\max\left(0,\dfrac{v_h^{(k)}}{2\delta_r}\right) +\max\left\{0,\dfrac{v_h^{(k)}}{2\delta_r}\right\} \\ \hline -x_{hl}^{(k)} & +x_{hl}^{(k+1)} & \begin{array}{l} \arg \min_{x \geq 0} \left( @@ -73,15 +77,16 @@ c^r. a_{il}^{-} ) \right.\\ \right) \end{array} & -\max\left(0,\dfrac{-\sum_{i \in N} \left( +\max\left\{0,\dfrac{-\sum_{i \in N} \left( \lambda_{i}^{(k)}.(c^s_l.a_{il}^{+} + c^r. a_{il}^{-} ) + u_{hi}^{(k)} a_{il} -\right)}{2\delta_x}\right) +\right)}{2\delta_x}\right\} \\ \hline \end{array} $$ -\caption{Expression of each optimized primal variable} +\caption{Primal Variables: Argmin and Direct Calculus}\label{table:min} \end{table*} - \ No newline at end of file + +This improvement \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/IWCMC14/convergence.tex b/IWCMC14/convergence.tex index 13b3b2d..b689f99 100644 --- a/IWCMC14/convergence.tex +++ b/IWCMC14/convergence.tex @@ -1,32 +1,42 @@ Let us first have a discussion on the stop criterion of the cited algorithm. -We claim that even if the variation of the dual function is less than a given +We claim that even if the variation of the dual function +(recalled in equation (\ref{eq:dualFunction})) +is less than a given threshold, this does not ensure that the lifetime has been maximized. Minimizing a function on a multiple domain (as the dual function) may indeed easily fall into a local trap because some of introduced variables may lead to uniformity of the output. \begin{figure} - to be continued - \caption{Relations between dual function threshold and $q_i$ convergence} + \begin{center} + \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{amplrate.png} + \end{center} + \caption{Relations between dual function variation and convergence of all the $q_i$} \label{fig:convergence:scatterplot} \end{figure} -Experiments have indeed shown that even if the dual -function seems to be constant -(variations between two evaluations of this one is less than $10^{-5}$) -not all the $q_i$ have the same value. -For instance, the Figure~\ref{fig:convergence:scatterplot} presents -a scatter plot. - -The maximum amplitude rate of the sequence of $q_i$ --which is -$\frac{\max_{i \in N} q_i} {\min_{i \in N}q_i}-1$-- +To explain this, we introduce the maximum amplitude rate $\zeta$ +of the sequence of $q$ which is defined as +$$ +\dfrac{\max_{i \in N} \{q_i\}} +{\min_{i \in N} \{q_i\}}-1. +$$ +The Figure~\ref{fig:convergence:scatterplot} presents +a scatter plot between $\zeta$, which is represented in $y$-coordinate - with respect to the +with respect to the value of the threshold for dual function that is represented in $x$-coordinate. -This figure shows that a very small threshold is a necessary condition, but not -a sufficient criteria to observe convergence of $q_i$. + +Experiments shown that even if the dual +function seems to be constant +(variations between two evaluations of this one is less than $10^{-5}$) +not all the $q_i$ have the same value, \textit{i. e.}, $\zeta$ is still large. +For instance, even with a threshold set to $10^{-5}$ there still can be more than +45\% of differences between two $q_i$. +To summarize, a very small threshold is a necessary condition, but not +a sufficient criteria to observe convergence of $q_i$. In the following, we consider the system are $\epsilon$-stable if both maximum amplitude rate and the dual function are less than a threshold $\epsilon$. diff --git a/IWCMC14/convexity.tex b/IWCMC14/convexity.tex index a663986..0f7bf7e 100644 --- a/IWCMC14/convexity.tex +++ b/IWCMC14/convexity.tex @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ v_h^{(k)}.\dfrac{\ln(\sigma^2/D_h)}{\gamma p ^{2/3}} + \lambda_h^{(k)}p $. The function inside the $\arg \min$ is strictly convex if and only if $\lambda_h$ is not null. This asymptotic configuration may arise due to -the definition of $\lambda_i$. Worth, in this case, the function is +the definition of $\lambda_h$. Worth, in this case, the function is strictly decreasing and the minimal value is obtained when $p$ is the infinity. To prevent this configuration, we replace the objective function given @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ in equation~(\ref{eq:obj2}) by In this equation we have first introduced new regularisation factors (namely $\delta_x$, $\delta_r$, and $\delta_p$) instead of the sole $\delta$. -This allows to further study the influence of each modification separately. +This allows to further separately study the influence of each factor. Next, the introduction of the rational exponent is motivated by the goal of providing a strictly convex function. @@ -38,10 +38,12 @@ $$ \begin{array}{rcl} f'(p) &=& -2/3.v_h.\dfrac{\ln(\sigma^2/D_h)}{\gamma p^{5/3}} + \lambda_h + 8/3.\delta_p p^{5/3} \\ -&& \dfrac {8/3.\delta_p p^{10/3} + \lambda_h p^{5/3} -2/3.v_h\ln(\sigma^2/D_h) }{p^{5/3}} +& = & \dfrac {8/3\gamma.\delta_p p^{10/3} + \lambda_h p^{5/3} -2/3.v_h\ln(\sigma^2/D_h) }{p^{5/3}} \end{array} $$ which is positive if and only if the numerator is. -Provided $p^{5/3}$ is replaced by $P$, we have a quadratic function which is strictly convex, for any value of $\lambda_h$. +Provided $p^{5/3}$ is replaced by $P$, we have a quadratic function +which is strictly convex, for any value of $\lambda_h$ since the discriminant +is positive. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/IWCMC14/main.tex b/IWCMC14/main.tex index 67018d3..bd4e952 100644 --- a/IWCMC14/main.tex +++ b/IWCMC14/main.tex @@ -21,6 +21,7 @@ \newcommand{\CG}[1]{\begin{color}{blue}\textit{}\end{color}} +\newcommand{\R}[0]{\ensuremath{\mathbb{R}}} \author{ @@ -88,7 +89,6 @@ \subsection{A closer look to convexity} \input{convexity} -\JFC{On doit parler du probleme pour Ps} \subsection{Directly retrieving the argmin} \input{argmin} @@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ %\bibliographystyle{compj} \bibliographystyle{IEEEtran} -\bibliography{forensicsVer4} +\bibliography{abbrev,biblioand}