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Parameterized Complexity of Stationarity Testing for Piecewise-Affine Functions and Shallow CNN Losses

We study the parameterized complexity of testing approximate first-order stationarity at a prescribed point for continuous piecewise-affine (PA) functions, a basic task in nonsmooth optimization. PA functions form a canonical model for nonsmooth stationarity testing and capture the local polyhedral geometry that appears in ReLU-type training losses. Recent work by Tian and So (SODA 2025) shows that testing approximate stationarity notions for PA functions is computationally intractable in the worst case, and identifies fixed-dimensional tractability as an open direction. We address this direction from the viewpoint of parameterized complexity, with the ambient dimension $d$ as the parameter. In this paper, we give XP algorithms in fixed dimension for the tractable sides, and prove W[1]-hardness for the complementary sides. Moreover, lower bounds under the Exponential Time Hypothesis rule out algorithms running in time $ρ(d)\size^{o(d)}$ for any computable function $ρ$, where $\size$ denotes the total binary encoding length of the stationarity-testing instance. As a further consequence, our results yield the corresponding parameterized complexity picture for testing local minimality of continuous PA functions. We further extend our hardness results to a family of shallow ReLU CNN training losses, with stationarity tested in the trainable weight space. Thus, the same parameterized-complexity picture also appears for simple CNN training losses.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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