Total Variation Rates for Riemannian Flow Matching
This work addresses the theoretical understanding of generative modeling on manifolds, which is incremental as it extends existing flow-based methods to Riemannian settings with rigorous convergence guarantees.
The paper tackles the problem of analyzing the convergence of Riemannian flow matching (RFM) samplers on manifolds by developing a nonasymptotic Total Variation (TV) convergence analysis, resulting in explicit bounds that separate numerical discretization and learning errors, with polynomial iteration complexities demonstrated on specific manifolds like the hypersphere and SPD manifolds.
Riemannian flow matching (RFM) extends flow-based generative modeling to data supported on manifolds by learning a time-dependent tangent vector field whose flow-ODE transports a simple base distribution to the data law. We develop a nonasymptotic Total Variation (TV) convergence analysis for RFM samplers that use a learned vector field together with Euler discretization on manifolds. Our key technical ingredient is a differential inequality governing the evolution of TV between two manifold ODE flows, which expresses the time-derivative of TV through the divergence of the vector-field mismatch and the score of the reference flow; controlling these terms requires establishing new bounds that explicitly account for parallel transport and curvature. Under smoothness assumptions on the population flow-matching field and either uniform (compact manifolds) or mean-square (Hadamard manifolds) approximation guarantees for the learned field, we obtain explicit bounds of the form $\mathrm{TV}\le C_{\mathrm{Lip}}\,h + C_{\varepsilon}\,\varepsilon$ (with an additional higher-order $\varepsilon^2$ term on compact manifolds), cleanly separating numerical discretization and learning errors. Here, $h$ is the step-size and $\varepsilon$ is the target accuracy. Instantiations yield \emph{explicit} polynomial iteration complexities on the hypersphere $S^d$, and on the SPD$(n)$ manifolds under mild moment conditions.