A Quantized Johnson Lindenstrauss Lemma: The Finding of Buffon's Needle
Abstract
In 1733, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon in France, set the ground of geometric probability theory by defining an enlightening problem: What is the probability that a needle thrown randomly on a ground made of equispaced parallel strips lies on two of them? In this work, we show that the solution to this problem, and its generalization to N dimensions, allows us to discover a quantized form of the Johnson-Lindenstrauss (JL) Lemma, i.e., one that combines a linear dimensionality reduction procedure with a uniform quantization of precision δ>0. In particular, given a finite set S ⊂ RN of S points and a distortion level ε>0, as soon as M > M0 = O(ε-2 S), we can (randomly) construct a mapping from ( S, 2) to (δ ZM, 1) that approximately preserves the pairwise distances between the points of S. Interestingly, compared to the common JL Lemma, the mapping is quasi-isometric and we observe both an additive and a multiplicative distortions on the embedded distances. These two distortions, however, decay as O(( S)/M) when M increases. Moreover, for coarse quantization, i.e., for high δ compared to the set radius, the distortion is mainly additive, while for small δ we tend to a Lipschitz isometric embedding. Finally, we prove the existence of a "nearly" quasi-isometric embedding of ( S, 2) into (δ ZM, 2). This one involves a non-linear distortion of the 2-distance in S that vanishes for distant points in this set. Noticeably, the additive distortion in this case is slower, and decays as O([4]( S)/M).
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.