Abstract
A Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) with generator $G$ trained to model the prior of images has been shown to perform better than sparsity-based regularizers in ill-posed inverse problems. In this work, we propose a new method of deploying a GAN-based prior to solve linear inverse problems using projected gradient descent (PGD). Our method learns a network-based projector for use in the PGD algorithm, eliminating the need for expensive computation of the Jacobian of $G$. Experiments show that our approach provides a speed-up of $30\text{-}40\times$ over earlier GAN-based recovery methods for similar accuracy in compressed sensing. Our main theoretical result is that if the measurement matrix is moderately conditioned for range($G$) and the projector is $\delta$-approximate, then the algorithm is guaranteed to reach $O(\delta)$ reconstruction error in $O(log(1/\delta))$ steps in the low noise regime. Additionally, we propose a fast method to design such measurement matrices for a given $G$. Extensive experiments demonstrate the efficacy of this method by requiring $5\text{-}10\times$ fewer measurements than random Gaussian measurement matrices for comparable recovery performance.
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URL
https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.09698