Litcius/Paper detail

Automatic differentiation in PCF

Damiano Mazza, Michele Pagani

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We study the correctness of automatic differentiation (AD) in the context of a higher-order, Turing-complete language (PCF with real numbers), both in forward and reverse mode. Our main result is that, under mild hypotheses on the primitive functions included in the language, AD is almost everywhere correct, that is, it computes the derivative or gradient of the program under consideration except for a set of Lebesgue measure zero. Stated otherwise, there are inputs on which AD is incorrect, but the probability of randomly choosing one such input is zero. Our result is in fact more precise, in that the set of failure points admits a more explicit description: for example, in case the primitive functions are just constants, addition and multiplication, the set of points where AD fails is contained in a countable union of zero sets of polynomials.

Topics & Concepts

MathematicsZero (linguistics)Set (abstract data type)Multiplication (music)Countable setNull setTuringContext (archaeology)Discrete mathematicsMeasure (data warehouse)Constant (computer programming)Real numberComputer scienceCombinatoricsPhilosophyDatabaseBiologyPaleontologyProgramming languageLinguisticsComputability, Logic, AI AlgorithmsAlgorithms and Data Compressionsemigroups and automata theory