| // Ceres Solver - A fast non-linear least squares minimizer | 
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 | // Author: sameeragarwal@google.com (Sameer Agarwal) | 
 |  | 
 | #include "ceres/corrector.h" | 
 |  | 
 | #include <cstddef> | 
 | #include <cmath> | 
 | #include "ceres/internal/eigen.h" | 
 | #include "glog/logging.h" | 
 |  | 
 | namespace ceres { | 
 | namespace internal { | 
 |  | 
 | Corrector::Corrector(const double sq_norm, const double rho[3]) { | 
 |   CHECK_GE(sq_norm, 0.0); | 
 |   sqrt_rho1_ = sqrt(rho[1]); | 
 |  | 
 |   // If sq_norm = 0.0, the correction becomes trivial, the residual | 
 |   // and the jacobian are scaled by the square root of the derivative | 
 |   // of rho. Handling this case explicitly avoids the divide by zero | 
 |   // error that would occur below. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // The case where rho'' < 0 also gets special handling. Technically | 
 |   // it shouldn't, and the computation of the scaling should proceed | 
 |   // as below, however we found in experiments that applying the | 
 |   // curvature correction when rho'' < 0, which is the case when we | 
 |   // are in the outlier region slows down the convergence of the | 
 |   // algorithm significantly. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // Thus, we have divided the action of the robustifier into two | 
 |   // parts. In the inliner region, we do the full second order | 
 |   // correction which re-wights the gradient of the function by the | 
 |   // square root of the derivative of rho, and the Gauss-Newton | 
 |   // Hessian gets both the scaling and the rank-1 curvature | 
 |   // correction. Normally, alpha is upper bounded by one, but with this | 
 |   // change, alpha is bounded above by zero. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // Empirically we have observed that the full Triggs correction and | 
 |   // the clamped correction both start out as very good approximations | 
 |   // to the loss function when we are in the convex part of the | 
 |   // function, but as the function starts transitioning from convex to | 
 |   // concave, the Triggs approximation diverges more and more and | 
 |   // ultimately becomes linear. The clamped Triggs model however | 
 |   // remains quadratic. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // The reason why the Triggs approximation becomes so poor is | 
 |   // because the curvature correction that it applies to the gauss | 
 |   // newton hessian goes from being a full rank correction to a rank | 
 |   // deficient correction making the inversion of the Hessian fraught | 
 |   // with all sorts of misery and suffering. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // The clamped correction retains its quadratic nature and inverting it | 
 |   // is always well formed. | 
 |   if ((sq_norm == 0.0) || (rho[2] <= 0.0)) { | 
 |     residual_scaling_ = sqrt_rho1_; | 
 |     alpha_sq_norm_ = 0.0; | 
 |     return; | 
 |   } | 
 |  | 
 |   // We now require that the first derivative of the loss function be | 
 |   // positive only if the second derivative is positive. This is | 
 |   // because when the second derivative is non-positive, we do not use | 
 |   // the second order correction suggested by BANS and instead use a | 
 |   // simpler first order strategy which does not use a division by the | 
 |   // gradient of the loss function. | 
 |   CHECK_GT(rho[1], 0.0); | 
 |  | 
 |   // Calculate the smaller of the two solutions to the equation | 
 |   // | 
 |   // 0.5 *  alpha^2 - alpha - rho'' / rho' *  z'z = 0. | 
 |   // | 
 |   // Start by calculating the discriminant D. | 
 |   const double D = 1.0 + 2.0 * sq_norm * rho[2] / rho[1]; | 
 |  | 
 |   // Since both rho[1] and rho[2] are guaranteed to be positive at | 
 |   // this point, we know that D > 1.0. | 
 |  | 
 |   const double alpha = 1.0 - sqrt(D); | 
 |  | 
 |   // Calculate the constants needed by the correction routines. | 
 |   residual_scaling_ = sqrt_rho1_ / (1 - alpha); | 
 |   alpha_sq_norm_ = alpha / sq_norm; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void Corrector::CorrectResiduals(const int num_rows, double* residuals) { | 
 |   DCHECK(residuals != NULL); | 
 |   // Equation 11 in BANS. | 
 |   VectorRef(residuals, num_rows) *= residual_scaling_; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void Corrector::CorrectJacobian(const int num_rows, | 
 |                                 const int num_cols, | 
 |                                 double* residuals, | 
 |                                 double* jacobian) { | 
 |   DCHECK(residuals != NULL); | 
 |   DCHECK(jacobian != NULL); | 
 |  | 
 |   // The common case (rho[2] <= 0). | 
 |   if (alpha_sq_norm_ == 0.0) { | 
 |     VectorRef(jacobian, num_rows * num_cols) *= sqrt_rho1_; | 
 |     return; | 
 |   } | 
 |  | 
 |   // Equation 11 in BANS. | 
 |   // | 
 |   //  J = sqrt(rho) * (J - alpha^2 r * r' J) | 
 |   // | 
 |   // In days gone by this loop used to be a single Eigen expression of | 
 |   // the form | 
 |   // | 
 |   //  J = sqrt_rho1_ * (J - alpha_sq_norm_ * r* (r.transpose() * J)); | 
 |   // | 
 |   // Which turns out to about 17x slower on bal problems. The reason | 
 |   // is that Eigen is unable to figure out that this expression can be | 
 |   // evaluated columnwise and ends up creating a temporary. | 
 |   for (int c = 0; c < num_cols; ++c) { | 
 |     double r_transpose_j = 0.0; | 
 |     for (int r = 0; r < num_rows; ++r) { | 
 |       r_transpose_j += jacobian[r * num_cols + c] * residuals[r]; | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 |     for (int r = 0; r < num_rows; ++r) { | 
 |       jacobian[r * num_cols + c] = sqrt_rho1_ * | 
 |           (jacobian[r * num_cols + c] - | 
 |            alpha_sq_norm_ * residuals[r] * r_transpose_j); | 
 |     } | 
 |   } | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | }  // namespace internal | 
 | }  // namespace ceres |