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Papers/Coordinate Heterogeneity Governs Binary Quantization: From InfoNCE to Recall
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Coordinate Heterogeneity Governs Binary Quantization: From InfoNCE to Recall

May 17, 2026

arXiv
Abstract

Binary quantization (BQ) compresses high-dimensional embeddings into one or two bits per coordinate, enabling nearest neighbor search at extreme speed. Yet a striking puzzle persists: BQ achieves competitive recall on contrastive embeddings but fails on others -- and two leading systems adopt diametrically opposite strategies (random rotation vs. preserving coordinate axes) without a common theory explaining when each is appropriate. We resolve this puzzle by connecting the Gaussian structure recently established for InfoNCE-trained representations to a complete analytical framework for BQ quality. The key insight is that coordinate heterogeneity -- the non-uniformity of per-coordinate variances -- governs the key aspects of BQ performance. We derive closed-form expressions for ranking fidelity, prove that the magnitude bit carries information proportional to heterogeneity, and show that random rotation destroys precisely the signal that one paradigm exploits while creating the isotropy that the other requires. A two-parameter scaling law predicts fidelity across models and dimensions. Experiments on 13 datasets and 6 embedding families validate all predictions and provide the first principled design guide for binary quantization systems.

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Authors
Wenxuan Xiao
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Cross-links
arXiv:2605.17524