Paper detail

PrismQuant: Rate-Distortion-Optimal Vector Quantization for Gaussian-Mixture Sources

For a Gaussian source under mean-squared error (MSE), classical transform coding is rate--distortion (RD) optimal: the Karhunen--Loeve transform (KLT) diagonalizes the covariance, reverse waterfilling allocates the bits, and scalar quantization closes the loop. This elegant story breaks down for multimodal sources, where no single covariance can capture heterogeneous local geometries, and the RD function loses its closed form. We revisit this problem through Gaussian-mixture sources and develop a constructive RD theory for them. Our key finding is that the mixture structure incurs only a component label cost. Conditioned on the active mixture component, each branch is Gaussian; the challenge is allocating bits across heterogeneous branches. We prove that the genie-aided conditional RD function is governed by a single global reverse-waterfilling level shared across all components and eigenmodes. Building on this result, we introduce PrismQuant, which transmits the component label losslessly and encodes the residual using the component-matched KLT, followed by scalar quantization, achieving a rate of H(C)/n bits per source dimension of the converse, with a vanishing asymptotic gap. We further develop a practical implementation based on EM-driven Gaussian-mixture learning, component-adaptive KLTs, and entropy-constrained scalar quantization (ECSQ). Experiments on synthetic Gaussian mixtures show that PrismQuant closely approaches the theoretical RD bound, while experiments on real-world channel-state-information (CSI) data demonstrate competitive or superior performance compared with transformer-based learned codecs at more than one order of magnitude smaller model size.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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