Minimal Information Control Invariance via Vector Quantization

arXiv cs.RO / 4/6/2026

💬 OpinionSignals & Early TrendsIdeas & Deep AnalysisModels & Research

Key Points

  • The paper addresses safety-critical autonomous control under hard state constraints with limited sensing and compute, focusing on how few distinct control signals are needed to guarantee forward invariance under sampled-data control.
  • It connects the required control information to invariance entropy and proposes a vector-quantized autoencoder that learns both a state-space partition and a finite control codebook.
  • The authors develop an iterative forward certification method that combines Lipschitz-based reachable-set enclosures with sum-of-squares (SOS) programming to verify invariance.
  • Experiments on a 12D nonlinear quadrotor model show the learned controller maintains invariance while achieving a 157× reduction in codebook size versus a uniform-grid baseline.
  • The work also empirically estimates the minimum sensing resolution needed to operate safely with the learned quantized controller.

Abstract

Safety-critical autonomous systems must satisfy hard state constraints under tight computational and sensing budgets, yet learning-based controllers are often far more complex than safe operation requires. To formalize this gap, we study how many distinct control signals are needed to render a compact set forward invariant under sampled-data control, connecting the question to the information-theoretic notion of invariance entropy. We propose a vector-quantized autoencoder that jointly learns a state-space partition and a finite control codebook, and develop an iterative forward certification algorithm that uses Lipschitz-based reachable-set enclosures and sum-of-squares programming. On a 12-dimensional nonlinear quadrotor model, the learned controller achieves a 157\times reduction in codebook size over a uniform grid baseline while preserving invariance, and we empirically characterize the minimum sensing resolution compatible with safe operation.