Numerically Stable Polynomially Coded Computing

Autor: Fahim, Mohammad, Cadambe, Viveck R.
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Druh dokumentu: Working Paper
Popis: We study the numerical stability of polynomial based encoding methods, which has emerged to be a powerful class of techniques for providing straggler and fault tolerance in the area of coded computing. Our contributions are as follows: 1) We construct new codes for matrix multiplication that achieve the same fault/straggler tolerance as the previously constructed MatDot Codes and Polynomial Codes. Unlike previous codes that use polynomials expanded in a monomial basis, our codes uses a basis of orthogonal polynomials. 2) We show that the condition number of every $m \times m$ sub-matrix of an $m \times n, n \geq m$ Chebyshev-Vandermonde matrix, evaluated on the $n$-point Chebyshev grid, grows as $O(n^{2(n-m)})$ for $n > m$. An implication of this result is that, when Chebyshev-Vandermonde matrices are used for coded computing, for a fixed number of redundant nodes $s=n-m,$ the condition number grows at most polynomially in the number of nodes $n$. 3) By specializing our orthogonal polynomial based constructions to Chebyshev polynomials, and using our condition number bound for Chebyshev-Vandermonde matrices, we construct new numerically stable techniques for coded matrix multiplication. We empirically demonstrate that our constructions have significantly lower numerical errors compared to previous approaches which involve inversion of Vandermonde matrices. We generalize our constructions to explore the trade-off between computation/communication and fault-tolerance. 4) We propose a numerically stable specialization of Lagrange coded computing. Motivated by our condition number bound, our approach involves the choice of evaluation points and a suitable decoding procedure that involves inversion of an appropriate Chebyshev-Vandermonde matrix. Our approach is demonstrated empirically to have lower numerical errors as compared to standard methods.
Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, to be presented in part at the IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT), July 2019
Databáze: arXiv