A Geometric Lens on Physics-Aligned Data Compression
Aleix Segui Ugalde, Wesley Armour
ICML 2026 regular
Abstract (source: OpenReview · © authors)
In AI for Science, physics-informed losses are increasingly used to train learned compressors for scientific data, but their rate--distortion implications remain poorly understood. At fixed bitrate, these objectives often improve preservation of a target physical observable while degrading standard reconstruction fidelity. We develop a local geometric theory showing that this tradeoff is governed by the interaction of latent-space sensitivities induced by the entropy model, the physical observable, and the distortion metric. At each operating point, these induce preferred directions along which compression noise should be suppressed, yielding an anisotropic error-allocation mechanism. When these directions are misaligned, improving the observable at fixed rate necessarily worsens standard distortion, establishing a fundamental limit on simultaneous preservation. We formalise this through a local tangent-space rate--distortion law and introduce a practical alignment diagnostic based on dominant eigenspace overlap. Experiments across scientific domains test the theory and validate that the alignment diagnostic correlates with observed data- and physics-space trade-offs.
Keywords
Metadata from BioTender-max/icml2026-ai-bio (CC0-1.0). Phở does not host any PDF; links point back to the source.
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