Abstract:In this work, we propose a novel adaptive stochastic gradient-free (ASGF) approach for solving high-dimensional nonconvex optimization problems based on function evaluations. We employ a directional Gaussian smoothing of the target function that generates a surrogate of the gradient and assists in avoiding bad local optima by utilizing nonlocal information of the loss landscape. Applying a deterministic quadrature scheme results in a massively scalable technique that is sample-efficient and achieves spectral accuracy. At each step we randomly generate the search directions while primarily following the surrogate of the smoothed gradient. This enables exploitation of the gradient direction while maintaining sufficient space exploration, and accelerates convergence towards the global extrema. In addition, we make use of a local approximation of the Lipschitz constant in order to adaptively adjust the values of all hyperparameters, thus removing the careful fine-tuning of current algorithms that is often necessary to be successful when applied to a large class of learning tasks. As such, the ASGF strategy offers significant improvements when solving high-dimensional nonconvex optimization problems when compared to other gradient-free methods (including the so called "evolutionary strategies") as well as iterative approaches that rely on the gradient information of the objective function. We illustrate the improved performance of this method by providing several comparative numerical studies on benchmark global optimization problems and reinforcement learning tasks.