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Article

Approximate Solutions of a Fixed-Point Problem with an Algorithm Based on Unions of Nonexpansive Mappings

by
Alexander J. Zaslavski
Department of Mathematics, Technion–Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3200003, Israel
Mathematics 2023, 11(6), 1534; https://doi.org/10.3390/math11061534
Submission received: 14 February 2023 / Revised: 3 March 2023 / Accepted: 20 March 2023 / Published: 22 March 2023

Abstract

:
In this paper, we study a fixed-point problem with a set-valued mapping by using an algorithm based on unions of nonexpansive mappings. We show that an approximate solution is reached after a finite number of iterations in the presence of computational errors. This result is an extension of the results known in the literature.

1. Introduction

The study of fixed-point problems is an important topic in nonlinear analysis [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]. These problems have various applications in mathematical analysis, optimization theory, engineering, medicine, and the natural sciences [14,15,16,17,18,19,20]. In particular, in [21], a novel framework for the investigation of iterative algorithms was introduced. This framework was given in terms of a certain nonlinear set-valued map T defined on a space X. For every  x X T ( x )  is a finite union of values of single-valued paracontracting operators. Tam [21] established a convergence for this algorithm. Note that his result was a generalization of the result attained by Bauschke and Noll [22]. In our recent paper [23], we obtained an extension of a result of [21]. It should be mentioned that in [21], X is a finite-dimensional Euclidean space, while in [23] and in the present paper, X is an arbitrary metric space. The main result of [23] was obtained for inexact iterations of operators under the assumption that the common fixed-point problem has a solution. In the present paper, we prove an extension of this result in a case in which the common fixed-point problem has only an approximated solution.

2. Preliminaries

Assume that  ( X , ρ )  is a metric space endowed with a metric  ρ  and that  C X  is its nonempty closed set. For every  u X  and every  Δ ( 0 , ) , we set
B ( u , Δ ) = { v X : ρ ( u , v ) Δ } .
For every map  A : C C , we define
Fix ( A ) = { u C : A ( u ) = u } .
Assume that  T i : C C i = 1 , , m , where  m 1  is an integer,  0 < c ¯ 1 , and that for every  j { 1 , , m } , every  u Fix ( T j ) , and every  v C ,
ρ ( u , v ) 2 ρ ( u , T j ( v ) ) 2 c ¯ ρ ( v , T j ( v ) ) 2 .
It should be mentioned that inequality (1) is true for many nonlinear operators [14,15].
Assume that
ϕ : X 2 { 1 , , m } \ { } .
We set
T ( u ) = { T j ( u ) : j ϕ ( u ) } .
for each  u C  and
F ( T ) = { u C : u T ( u ) } .
In this paper, we study the fixed-point problem
Find x X such   that x T ( x ) .
This problem was introduced and studied in [21]. It should be mentioned that in [21], X was a finite-dimensional Euclidean space, and the mappings  T i i = 1 , , m  were paracontracting. Tam [21] considered a sequence of iterations  { x k } k = 0 X  satisfying  x k + 1 T ( x k )  for every integer  k 0  and established its convergence under the assumption that the mappings  T i i = 1 , , m  had a common fixed point. In [21], this convergent result was applied to sparsity-constrained minimization. Note that the result in [21] was a generalization of the result attained by Bauschke and Noll [22]. In our recent paper [23], we considered mappings acting on a general metric space and obtained two extensions of the result from [21]. In the first result, we studied exact iterations of the set-valued mapping, while in the second one, we dealt with its inexact iterations while taking computational errors into account. More precisely, in [23], for a given computational error  δ > 0 , we considered a sequence  { x k } k = 0 X  satisfying  B ( x k + 1 , δ ) T ( x k )  for every integer  k 0  and analyzed its behavior. This result was also obtained under the assumption that the mappings  T i i = 1 , , m  had a common fixed point. In the present paper, we generalize this result. Instead of assuming the existence of a common fixed point, we suppose that there exists an approximate common fixed point z such that
B ( z , γ ) Fix ( T i ) , i = 1 , , m ,
where  γ  is a given small positive constant. In other words, a small neighborhood of z contains a fixed point of every mapping.
We fix
θ C .
For any  u R 1 , we set
u = max { j : j as   an   integer   and j u } .
We prove the following theorem in the presence of computational errors. This theorem shows that after a certain number of iterations, we obtain an approximate solution to our fixed-point problem. The number of iterations depends on the computational error.
Theorem 1. 
Let  M > 0 ϵ ( 0 , 1 ] ,
γ ( 0 , ( 18 ) 1 ( 4 M + 4 ) 1 ϵ 2 c ¯ ) ,
z B ( θ , M )
satisfy
B ( z , γ ) Fix ( T i ) , i = 1 , , m ,
Q = 8 ϵ 2 M 2 c ¯ 1 + 1 ,
and  δ ( 0 , γ ) .  Assume that  { x k } k = 0 C ,
ρ ( θ , x 0 ) M
and that
B ( x k + 1 , δ ) T ( x k ) , k = 0 , 1 , .
Then, there is a nonnegative integer  p < Q  for which
B ( x p , ϵ ) T ( x p ) .
In the theorem above, we assume the existence of a point z that satisfies (7), which means that z is an approximate fixed point for all of the mappings  T i i = 1 , , m . This result has a prototype in [23], which was obtained under the assumption that z is a common fixed point for all  T k k = 1 , , m .

3. Proof of Theorem 1

Proof. 
Assume that for every nonnegative integer  k < Q , relation (11) is not true. Then, for every nonnegative integer  k < Q ,
B ( x k , ϵ ) T ( x k ) = .
We set
M 0 = 2 M + 1 .
According to (7), for every  k { 1 , , m } , there is
z k Fix ( T k )
such that
ρ ( z , z k ) γ .
According to (6) and (9),
ρ ( x 0 , z ) 2 M .
Let  i [ 0 , Q 1 ]  be an integer. According to (10), there is
x ^ i + 1 T ( x i )
for which
ρ ( x i + 1 , x ^ i + 1 ) δ .
Equations (3) and (17) imply that there is an integer  j [ 1 , m ]  for which
x ^ i + 1 = T j ( x i ) .
It follows from (1) and (19) that
ρ ( z j , x i ) 2 ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 + c ¯ ρ ( x i , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 .
According to (12) and (19),
ρ ( x i , x ^ i + 1 ) > ϵ .
In view of (20) and (21),
ρ ( z j , x i ) 2 ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 + c ¯ ϵ 2 .
Assume that
ρ ( z , x i ) M 0 .
(In view of (13) and (16), Equation (23) holds for  i = 0 ). Equations (15) and (23) imply that
ρ ( z j , x i ) ρ ( z j , z ) + ρ ( z , x i ) M 0 + γ .
It follows from (5), (13), (22), and (24) that
ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 ρ ( z j , x i ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯ ( M 0 + γ ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯
= M 0 2 + γ ( γ + 2 M 0 ) ϵ 2 c ¯ M 0 2 + γ ( 1 + 2 M 0 ) ϵ 2 c ¯
M 0 2 7 γ ( 1 + 2 M 0 ) ( M 0 2 γ ) 2
and
ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) M 0 2 γ .
According to (15) and (25),
ρ ( z , x i + 1 ) ρ ( z , z j ) + ρ ( z j , x ^ t + 1 ) + ρ ( x ^ i + 1 , x i + 1 )
M 0 2 γ + γ + γ M 0
and
ρ ( z , x i + 1 ) M 0 .
According to (22),
ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 ρ ( z j , x i ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯ .
Equations (15) and (23) imply that
| ρ ( x i , z ) 2 ρ ( x i , z j ) 2 |
( ρ ( x i , z ) + ρ ( x i , z j ) ) | ρ ( x i , z ) ρ ( x i , z j ) |
( ρ ( x i , z ) + ρ ( x i , z ) + γ ) ρ ( z j , z ) γ ( 2 M 0 + 1 ) .
It follows from (15), (18), and (26) that
| ρ ( x i + 1 , z ) 2 ρ ( x ^ i + 1 , z j ) 2 |
( ρ ( x i + 1 , z ) + ρ ( x ^ i + 1 , z j ) ) | ρ ( x i + 1 , z ) ρ ( x ^ i + 1 , z j ) |
( 2 M 0 + γ + δ ) ( ρ ( z j , z ) + ρ ( x ^ i + 1 , x i + 1 ) ) ( 2 M 0 + 2 ) ( γ + δ ) .
By (5), (13), (22), and (29),
ρ ( x i + 1 , z ) 2 ρ ( z j , x ^ i + 1 ) 2 + 2 γ ( 2 M 0 + 2 )
ρ ( z j , x i ) 2 c ¯ ϵ 2 + 2 γ ( 2 M 0 + 2 )
ρ ( x i , z ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯ + γ ( 2 M 0 + 1 ) + 2 γ ( 2 M 0 + 2 )
ρ ( x i , z ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯ + 3 γ ( 2 M 0 + 1 )
ρ ( x i , z ) 2 ϵ 2 c ¯ / 2 .
Thus, we have shown by induction that (23) and (30) hold for  i = 0 , , Q 1 . By (16) and (30),
4 M 2 ρ ( z , x 0 ) ) 2
ρ ( z , x 0 ) 2 ρ ( z , x Q ) 2
= i = 0 Q 1 ( ρ ( z , x i ) 2 ρ ( z , x i + 1 ) 2 ) Q c ¯ ϵ 2 / 2 ,
and
Q 8 M 2 c ¯ 1 ϵ 2 .
This contradicts (8). The contradiction that we have reached proves Theorem 1. □

4. Extensions

We use the notation and definitions introduced in Section 2.
Lemma 1. 
Assume that  M 0 > 0 ,
z B ( θ , M 0 ) ,
B ( z , 1 ) Fix ( T i ) , i = 1 , , m ,
x 0 B ( θ , M 0 ) ,
x 1 C , and
B ( x 1 , 1 ) T ( x 0 ) .
Then,
ρ ( x 1 , θ ) 3 M 0 + 3 .
Proof. 
According to (3), there is an integer  j [ 1 , m ]  for which
ρ ( x 1 , T j ( x 0 ) ) 1 .
According to (32), there is
z j Fix ( T j )
for which
ρ ( z , z j ) 1 .
Equations (1), (31), (33), and (35)–(37) imply that
ρ ( x 1 , θ ) ρ ( θ , T j ( x 0 ) ) + ρ ( T j ( x 0 ) , x 1 )
1 + ρ ( θ , z ) + ρ ( z , z j ) + ρ ( z j , T j ( x 0 ) )
1 + M 0 + 1 + ρ ( z j , x 0 )
2 + M 0 + ρ ( θ , x 0 ) + ρ ( θ , z ) + ρ ( z , z j )
3 + 3 M 0 .
Lemma 1 is proved. □
Theorem 2. 
Let  M > 0 ϵ ( 0 , 1 ] ,
γ ( 0 , ( 18 ) 1 ( 12 M + 12 ) 1 ϵ 2 c ¯ ) ,
z B ( θ , M )
satisfy
B ( z , γ ) Fix ( T i ) , i = 1 , , m ,
Q = 8 ϵ 2 ( 3 M + 3 ) 2 c ¯ 1 + 1 ,
and  δ ( 0 , γ ) .
Assume that  { x k } k = 0 C ,
ρ ( θ , x 0 ) M ,
and that
B ( x k + 1 , δ ) T ( x k ) , k = 0 , 1 , .
Then, there is  j { 1 , , Q }  for which
B ( x j , ϵ ) T ( x j ) .
Proof. 
Lemma 1 implies that
ρ ( x 1 , θ ) 3 M + 3 .
The application of Theorem 1 to the sequence  { x i + 1 } i = 0  implies our result. □
Theorem 3. 
Let  M > 0 ϵ ( 0 , 1 ] ,
{ ξ C : B ( ξ , ϵ ) T ( ξ ) } B ( θ , M ) ,
γ ( 0 , ( 18 ) 1 ( 12 M + 12 ) 1 ϵ 2 c ¯ ) ,
z B ( θ , M )
satisfy
B ( z , γ ) Fix ( T i ) , i = 1 , , m ,
Q = 8 ϵ 2 ( 3 M + 3 ) 2 c ¯ 1 + 1 ,
and  δ ( 0 , γ ) .
Assume that  { x k } k = 0 C ,
ρ ( θ , x 0 ) M ,
and that
B ( x k + 1 , δ ) T ( x k ) , k = 0 , 1 , .
Then, there exists a strictly increasing sequence of natural numbers  { q j } j = 1  such that
1 q 0 Q ,
and for each integer  j 0 ,
q j + 1 q j Q
B ( x q j , ϵ ) T ( x q j ) .
Proof. 
Theorem 2 implies that there exists  q 0 { 1 , , Q }  for which
B ( x q 0 , ϵ ) T ( x q 0 ) .
Assume that  p { 0 , 1 , } q j j = 0 , , p  are natural numbers such that for any integer j satisfying  0 j < p , (40) holds, and assume that (41) is true for all  j = 0 , , p . We set
y i = x i + q p , i = 0 , 1 , .
According to (38) and (41),
ρ ( θ , y 0 ) M .
Clearly, all of the assumptions of Theorem 2 hold with  x i = y i i = 0 , 1 , , and Theorem 2 implies that there is  j { 1 , , Q }  for which
B ( y j , ϵ ) T ( y j ) .
We set
q p + 1 = q p + j .
Clearly,
B ( x q p + 1 , ϵ ) T ( x q p + 1 ) .
Thus, by induction, we have constructed the sequence of natural numbers  { q j } j = 1  and proved Theorem 3. □

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Zaslavski, A.J. Approximate Solutions of a Fixed-Point Problem with an Algorithm Based on Unions of Nonexpansive Mappings. Mathematics 2023, 11, 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/math11061534

AMA Style

Zaslavski AJ. Approximate Solutions of a Fixed-Point Problem with an Algorithm Based on Unions of Nonexpansive Mappings. Mathematics. 2023; 11(6):1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/math11061534

Chicago/Turabian Style

Zaslavski, Alexander J. 2023. "Approximate Solutions of a Fixed-Point Problem with an Algorithm Based on Unions of Nonexpansive Mappings" Mathematics 11, no. 6: 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/math11061534

APA Style

Zaslavski, A. J. (2023). Approximate Solutions of a Fixed-Point Problem with an Algorithm Based on Unions of Nonexpansive Mappings. Mathematics, 11(6), 1534. https://doi.org/10.3390/math11061534

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