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Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_5
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
This paper proposes an approach to exact energy
minimization in discrete graphical models. The key idea is as follows:
The LP relaxation of the problem allows to identify, via arc
consistency/weak tree agreement, nodes for which the LP solution is also
optimal in the discrete sense. The nodes for which discrete optimality
cannot be established from the solution of the LP then define a
subproblem, a hopefully small graph, which is solved exactly using a
combinatorial solver. One of the contributions of the paper is to show
that, if the combinatorial solution's boundary is consistent with the
optimal part of the LP solution, the global optimum has been established.
If the condition is not met, the combinatorial search area must be grown
by the set of variables for which boundary consistency does not hold.
The proposed approach is viable only for sparse graphs, because in
this special case the combinatorial search area will often be small.
Quality: The paper is technically sound. The claims are
supported by theory, and, to a lesser extent, by experiments. The current
implementation of the solver is clearly not as efficient as it could be,
as most of the time is spent in the supposedly very fast TRW-S algorithm.
It would be interesting to see whether it would not have been faster to
solve the LP using CPLEX, too, or even the whole ILP using CPLEX in some
of the experiments. Such a comparison is not included in the paper (the
authors argue in the rebuttal that this is not feasible).
Clarity:
The paper is clearly written and easy to understand for a reader with
a background in discrete graphical models.
Originality: The
proposed approach is novel to my knowledge, although it builds heavily on
theory that is well-known from the literature, such as weak tree
agreement. Related work is thoroughly discussed and existing ideas are
clearly attributed to the original authors.
Significance:
While the proposed approach is insightful, I do not expect it to be of
significant interest to readers outside the graphical models community.
Even within this community, I do not see the proposed approach becoming
particularly popular, since it is not an elegant standalone approach but
rather draws on "heavy machinery" (combinatorial solvers) as a black box.
It provides an algorithmic perspective on solving a particular kind of
problem rather than an inspiring new
formulation. Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
This is a well-written paper that introduces a novel
approach to solving discrete graphical models to optimality. The approach
presented is solid, though not exciting in this reviewer's opinion,
because it mostly builds on established theory.
Nonetheless, I
think that the paper would be of interest to the graphical models
community and hence makes for a nice contribution to the technical program
of NIPS.
I'd also like to thank the authors for addressing my
concerns in their rebuttal. Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_6
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
Note: I've read the reviewers' feedback. I slightly
adjusted my rating based on reviewer discussions.
The paper
introduces a promising new strategy for computing a globally optimal MAP
solution for sparse Markov random fields. The idea is based on decomposing
the overall problem in two parts: a (large) convex part and a smaller
combinatorial search part. The decomposition is obtained by dividing the
underlying graph of the MRF into two sub-graphs, and looking for solutions
for the two sub-problems that agree on all boundary nodes that are shared.
This is a very elegant idea. Similar decomposition ideas have been tried
for other combinatorial optimization problems, but it is often difficult
to find the right decomposition to get an overall payoff. (Another
difficulty is to get the boundary assignments to "line up.") The
experimental evaluation of the approach presented here shows it to be
remarkably effective. Results are presented on several state-of-the-art
benchmarks from computer visions. For several problems, the first globally
optimal solution was found and for other instances (Potts models) the
method outperforms even the best specialized techniques on the hardest
instances.
The paper is very well-written. The work is
well-motivated. The formal framework is well-defined and the experimental
evaluation is carefully done and well-described.
Table 1 shows
that the sub-graph B, capturing the combinatorics of the problem, can be
surprisingly small compared to the overall graph. Can the authors provide
some further intuition behind this phenomenon? I.e., what exactly is
captured by B in terms of the original problem task. Is this a property of
the domain or of these particular instances? Why? Also, what domain
properties would break down such a nice
decomposition? Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
A promising new technique based on a clever problem
decomposition for finding globally optimal MAP solutions is presented.
Convincing empirical evidence for the effectiveness of the method is
provided. Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_7
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
Summary: The paper considers MAP inference in
pairwise MRFs, a problem that is generally NP-hard. The central idea
is to decompose the problem into two almost disjoint problems, except
for boundary variables, these are variables that are included in both
node sets. The central theorem of the paper says that if the two optimal
solutions given by solving both problems independently agree on
the boundary, then the overall problem is solved to optimality. The
authors introduce an algorithm that initially determines a
decomposition of the graph into two sets with a common boundary (based
on arc consistency) and then solves the larger set with LP based
approaches and the smaller problem with exact combinatorial solvers
(but possibly very expensive; integer programming solvers). If the
solutions on the boundary don't agree or the LP-based approach leads
to a fractional solution, then some variables are determined with a
heuristic to be included in solving with the combinatorial method.
This procedure is reiterated till the solution agrees on the boundary.
Pros: - Simple idea. - Clearly written paper. - Seems
to give optimal solutions for problems that have not been solved before
(did not double-check this claim in detail). - Nice property that
the LP part of the problem does not need to be resolved, when the
combinatorial set is increased. - Hardens the evidence that many MAP
inference problems are solved almost exactly by LP relaxations.
Cons: - Most of the statements in the paper are relatively
trivial, especially the main theorem. - I would have appreciated a
possible comparison to cutting plane approaches that tighten the local
marginal polytope with additional constraints e.g. by Sontag et al.
UAI 2008. Software is available so it should be relatively
straightforward to compare. It might be that the solvers are too slow,
in this case I would have appreciated a remark about this. - The
paper is very short on explanations/theory on why the heuristic presented
in the paper should work, it is mostly motivated by the empirical
observation that LP solvers do a good job on many problems. - I
find the experiments lacking: the authors do not described the exact form
of the potentials they used in the experiments for the Middleburry
dataset (Potts, l1, l2, truncated ?). Does the quality of the
solutions of the proposed algorithm somehow get influenced by the form
of the potentials?
Quality: Theory is rather simple.
Experiments do not match my expectations.
Clarity: The paper
is well written and easy to understand. The main idea is well
presented, I would have hoped to get a better understanding in which
situations the authors would expect the method to work well.
Originality: Theorem 3.0.1 and 3.0.2 are relatively trivial,
otherwise few original ideas except for the combination of
combinatorial and LP-based approaches.
Significance: The paper
might be significant in the sense that for a few more MAP problems the
research community knows the optimal labeling. It is however hard to
judge from the paper how practical and relevant the method is for the
bulk of MAP problems.
Minor points: 067: to a convex and a
combinatorial solver (no s!) 069: . in the end 060: Figure 1 is
not very illustrative, what's the difference between the figure on the
left and right, why is this useful? You should explain this in the
caption. 099: ofthe 192/210: Improve numbering of remarks /
theorems (just one digit) 256: Let x by a solution... 305: had to
serve (why is that? use serve if you decided so) 270: would appreciate
an energy comparison to the solution obtained by TRW-S 322: This might
not be the final number of variables you would need to solve for!
368: multiway-cut problem 370: for which the optimal 377:
performance of our method 400: can be solved an order
Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
Clearly written paper, relatively minor novelty and
significance. Unclear for which models the proposed method works
well.
Q1:Author
rebuttal: Please respond to any concerns raised in the reviews. There are
no constraints on how you want to argue your case, except for the fact
that your text should be limited to a maximum of 6000 characters. Note
however that reviewers and area chairs are very busy and may not read long
vague rebuttals. It is in your own interest to be concise and to the
point.
We thank the reviewers for their constructive
comments. R5: technically sound, claims supported by theory, clearly
written and easy to understand, approach is novel and thoroughly
discussed, well written paper, nice contribution. R6: Very elegant idea,
experimental evaluation remarkably effective, very well written, promising
new technique. R7: Clearly written paper, well written and easy to
understand, might be significant.
General comments:
Reviewers question the significance of the approach. Our
approach enabled us to solve 3 instances of the widely used benchmark
[24], from which only 1 instance has been solved before, as recently
discussed in [14]. The fact that solvers for the subproblems can be
replaced by other solvers supports existing work on dedicated solvers
developed in the community, and thus flexible applicability in connection
with our approach. We consider this a significant feature of our approach.
Specific comments:
* RV5: Directly applying CPLEX for the
LP or solve the whole problem as an ILP. Due to the large problem
sizes this is no feasible option. For instance, for the pfau instance,
we use MCA [19] which is applicable for Potts functions and solves an
equivalent ILP.
* RV6+7: Concerning the size of the subproblems in
Tab. 1. / Applicability of the method / Limitations Since the LP
relaxation is quite tight and the structure sparse, we obtain small
subproblems. The size of the combinatorial part B will grow for highly
connected graphs or LP solutions with many fractional variable values. We
do not assume that the whole LP relaxation is tight. We only exploit that
the optimum of the relaxation has many integral variables. For problems in
computer vision this is often the case, since local information is strong
in many image regions. We will point these issues out more clearly.
* RV7: Comparison to tighter relaxation (e.g. Sontag et. al)
We agree and will add a remark.
* RV7: Setup Middleburry
dataset We use the models provided along with [14] for reasons of
reproducibility. These are identical to those used in [24]. We will
point this out more clearly.
* RV7: Comparison to TRWS, results
for Tab. 1. Corresponding results are published in [14,24], e.g for
venus the energy of TRWS is 3048387 and optimal is 3048043. We will
improve the presentation of this part in the final version of the paper.
* RV7: Figure 1 is not very illustrative We will improve
it.
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