Piecewise linear functions and neural network expressivity via discriminantal arrangements
Pith reviewed 2026-05-13 20:32 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Discriminantal arrangements extend the hyperplane framework to characterize neural network expressivity via matroidal piecewise linear functions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We extend the hyperplane arrangement framework for neural network expressivity from the braid to discriminantal arrangements. Compatible piecewise linear functions are characterized by circuit relations and admit a matroidal description via Mobius inversion, with dimension equal to the number of independent sets. For circuits of size three, functions are determined by values on subsets of size at most two.
What carries the argument
Discriminantal arrangements, in which circuit relations characterize compatible piecewise linear functions and Mobius inversion supplies the matroidal dimension equal to the number of independent sets.
If this is right
- Compatible piecewise linear functions are fully determined by circuit relations.
- The dimension of the space equals the number of independent sets in the associated matroid.
- When all circuits have size three, the functions are completely fixed by their values on subsets of cardinality at most two.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The matroidal count could be used to compute the number of linear regions realizable by ReLU networks in arrangements beyond the braid case.
- Circuit relations might generalize to other combinatorial geometries, yielding similar dimension formulas for expressivity.
- The restriction to small circuits suggests that local data on pairs of hyperplanes suffice to determine global compatibility in low-complexity cases.
Load-bearing premise
Compatibility conditions and expressivity properties transfer from braid arrangements to discriminantal arrangements without extra constraints or loss of the matroidal structure.
What would settle it
A concrete counterexample of a discriminantal arrangement in which the space of compatible piecewise linear functions has dimension different from the number of independent sets or fails to be characterized by the circuit relations.
read the original abstract
We extend the hyperplane arrangement framework for neural network expressivity from the braid to discriminantal arrangements. Compatible piecewise linear functions are characterized by circuit relations and admit a matroidal description via Mobius inversion, with dimension equal to the number of independent sets. For circuits of size three, functions are determined by values on subsets of size at most two.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper extends the hyperplane arrangement framework for neural network expressivity from braid arrangements to discriminantal arrangements. It claims that compatible piecewise linear functions are characterized exactly by the circuit relations of the arrangement, admit a matroidal description via Möbius inversion, and have dimension equal to the number of independent sets in the associated matroid. For circuits of size three, the functions are determined by their values on subsets of size at most two.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the work provides a combinatorial and matroid-theoretic characterization of the space of compatible piecewise linear functions realized by neural networks, generalizing prior braid-arrangement results to a broader class of arrangements. This could yield explicit dimension formulas and structural insights into expressivity that are independent of specific network parameters. The matroidal description via Möbius inversion and the reduction for small circuits are potentially useful for enumeration and classification problems in the field.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract and characterization section] Abstract and the section on characterization of compatible functions: the claim that circuit relations alone fully characterize the space of compatible piecewise linear functions (yielding dimension equal to the number of independent sets) must be checked against possible additional linear dependencies arising from the intersection lattice of the discriminantal arrangement. Discriminantal arrangements can have flats that impose relations among hyperplanes not captured by circuits; if any such relation is independent of the circuits, the actual dimension would be strictly smaller than claimed. An explicit verification or counterexample ruling out extra constraints is needed for the transfer from the braid case to be load-bearing.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the main results without indicating where the proofs appear in the body; adding a sentence or two on the location of the key derivations would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and for identifying a key point that requires clarification in the characterization of compatible piecewise linear functions. We address the concern below and will strengthen the manuscript accordingly.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and characterization section] Abstract and the section on characterization of compatible functions: the claim that circuit relations alone fully characterize the space of compatible piecewise linear functions (yielding dimension equal to the number of independent sets) must be checked against possible additional linear dependencies arising from the intersection lattice of the discriminantal arrangement. Discriminantal arrangements can have flats that impose relations among hyperplanes not captured by circuits; if any such relation is independent of the circuits, the actual dimension would be strictly smaller than claimed. An explicit verification or counterexample ruling out extra constraints is needed for the transfer from the braid case to be load-bearing.
Authors: We agree that an explicit verification is needed to confirm that the circuit relations generate the full space of linear dependencies without additional independent constraints from higher flats in the intersection lattice. The manuscript establishes the characterization by associating to the discriminantal arrangement its underlying matroid, where the circuits are the minimal dependent sets and the space of compatible functions is defined as the kernel of the map induced by these circuit relations. The Möbius inversion formula then yields the dimension as the number of independent sets. Because the matroid is defined precisely by its circuits (via the circuit axioms, including elimination), all dependencies arising from larger flats are consequences of the circuit relations and do not reduce the dimension further. To make this rigorous and address the referee's concern directly, we will add a new lemma in the characterization section proving that any linear dependence coming from a flat is a linear combination of circuit relations, using the circuit elimination axiom and the specific combinatorial structure of discriminantal arrangements. We will also include an explicit low-dimensional example (a discriminantal arrangement with a 4-element flat) computing both the circuit-generated relation space and the full lattice-derived space to verify they coincide. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: extension applies standard matroid theory to new arrangement class
full rationale
The paper's derivation chain extends an existing hyperplane-arrangement framework for neural-network expressivity by replacing braid arrangements with discriminantal arrangements, then directly invokes the circuit relations of the new arrangement to characterize compatible piecewise-linear functions and applies the standard Möbius-inversion formula for the rank function of the associated matroid. No equation is shown to be equivalent to its own input by construction, no parameter is fitted on a subset and then relabeled as a prediction, and no load-bearing uniqueness theorem is imported solely via self-citation. The dimension claim (equal to the number of independent sets) follows immediately from the definition of the matroid induced by the circuit relations, which is an external, independently verifiable fact of matroid theory rather than a self-referential fit. The abstract and claimed steps therefore remain self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Hyperplane arrangement techniques from braid arrangements extend to discriminantal arrangements for characterizing neural network expressivity
- domain assumption Compatible piecewise linear functions admit a matroidal description via Mobius inversion
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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discussion (0)
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