Pedro Abdalla

CR
h-index1
3papers
6citations
Novelty55%
AI Score39

3 Papers

55.4ITApr 22
Robust Uniform Recovery of Structured Signals from Nonlinear Observations

Pedro Abdalla, Radu Balan, Junren Chen

While it is well known that the restricted isometry property (RIP) guarantees uniform sparse recovery from noisy linear measurements, uniform recovery of structured signals from nonlinear observations remains much less understood. This paper shows that the restricted approximate invertibility condition (RAIC) provides a unified approach to this end. Particularly, uniform recovery is achieved by projected gradient descent (PGD) with gradients obeying RAIC for all signals. As an application, under a large class of piecewise Lipschitz link functions (possibly discontinuous), we develop a uniform recovery theory for Gaussian single-index model by establishing the uniform RAIC for the gradient of the (scaled) $\ell_2$ loss via a covering argument. The theory generalizes the nonuniform recovery guarantees due to Plan and Vershynin (2016); Oymak and Soltanolkotabi (2017) and exhibits additional error terms that can be interpreted as the cost of uniform recovery. Intriguingly, in the three canonical settings of (a) sparse recovery via PGD with $\ell_0$ projection (i.e., iterative hard thresholding (IHT)), (b) sparse recovery via PGD with $\ell_1$ projection, and (c) recovering approximately sparse signals via PGD with $\ell_1$ projection, the additional error terms are negligible and in turn our uniform recovery error rates are at the same order of existing nonuniform ones, up to log factors. Our results hence improve on Genzel and Stollenwerk (2023). Under the specific nonlinearity of 1-bit quantization, we use a VC dimension argument to show that the uniform recovery error of IHT is at the same order of the nonuniform recovery error, with no loss of log factor. In addition, we show that the robustness of PGD to noise and corruption can be incorporated elegantly by bounding a single additional random process that captures the gradient mismatch.

CRMay 2, 2025
LLM Watermarking Using Mixtures and Statistical-to-Computational Gaps

Pedro Abdalla, Roman Vershynin

Given a text, can we determine whether it was generated by a large language model (LLM) or by a human? A widely studied approach to this problem is watermarking. We propose an undetectable and elementary watermarking scheme in the closed setting. Also, in the harder open setting, where the adversary has access to most of the model, we propose an unremovable watermarking scheme.

OCFeb 2, 2021
Community Detection with a Subsampled Semidefinite Program

Pedro Abdalla, Afonso S. Bandeira

Semidefinite programming is an important tool to tackle several problems in data science and signal processing, including clustering and community detection. However, semidefinite programs are often slow in practice, so speed up techniques such as sketching are often considered. In the context of community detection in the stochastic block model, Mixon and Xie \cite{mixon2020sketching} have recently proposed a sketching framework in which a semidefinite program is solved only on a subsampled subgraph of the network, giving rise to significant computational savings. In this short paper, we provide a positive answer to a conjecture of Mixon and Xie about the statistical limits of this technique for the stochastic block model with two balanced communities.