필터 지우기
필터 지우기

Unexpected numerical errors in matrix/vector multiplication

조회 수: 7 (최근 30일)
José Goulart
José Goulart 2014년 9월 4일
댓글: José Goulart 2014년 9월 8일
Hi,
I have observed an apparently very strange behavior when running a Matlab script. I have a very long data vector t (with 4560000 elements) and several other vectors x1,...,xM, all with the same dimension as t. Now, I basically want to compute the scalar product between each xm and t. I have done that using two procedures: the first one consists in computing each scalar product between a vector xm and t inside a for loop, while the other simply consists in forming a matrix X whose columns are the vectors xm and then computing the product of X transposed and t. Surprisingly, the results are very different!
For simplicity, let us suppose M=2. If I compute:
>> y1 = [x1 x2].'*t;
>> y2 = zeros(2,1);
>> y2(1) = x1.'*t;
>> y2(2) = x2.'*t;
Then I get a large relative normalized error
>> er = norm(y2-y1)/norm(y1)
er =
6.3080e-05
(By the way, norm(y1) = 1.2665e+06). Componentwise, the error is
>> y1(1)-y2(1)
ans =
1.5918
>> y1(2)-y2(2)
ans =
-0.0898
In principle, these alternatives should always yield the same results, regardless of the contents of those vectors, since they should be translated into machine code corresponding to equivalent operations. So, it seems odd to me that some kind of numerical issue arises.
Has anyone seen a similar behavior before and knows what might be causing that? Am I missing something with respect to the internal implementation of such operations?
Thanks,
Henrique
  댓글 수: 6
John D'Errico
John D'Errico 2014년 9월 4일
Adam - you do realize that difference IS machine precision?
Take the product of numbers on the order of 1e20. Add them in different order (because this is what the blas does, it controls the sequence of adds in big multiplies for efficiency.)
The error should be on the order of...
eps(1e40*1000)
ans =
1.2379e+27
So completely expected.
arich82
arich82 2014년 9월 4일
편집: arich82 2014년 9월 4일
I get something really, really weird.
If I start a new session of Matlab, the first time I run the code, I get no difference, but the second (and subsequent) time I run the code, I get non-trivial errors:
>> t=rand(1000,1);
x=rand(2,1000);
z1=x*t;
z2=zeros(2,1);
z2(1)=x(1,:)*t;
z2(2)=x(2,:)*t;
z1-z2
ans =
0
0
>> t=rand(1000,1);
x=rand(2,1000);
z1=x*t;
z2=zeros(2,1);
z2(1)=x(1,:)*t;
z2(2)=x(2,:)*t;
z1-z2
ans =
1.0e-12 *
-0.1990
0.0568
If I restart Matlab, same thing happens. This is in 8.3.0.532 (R2014a) running in Ubuntu 14.04, with dual Intel E5-2690 v2.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

채택된 답변

Oleg Komarov
Oleg Komarov 2014년 9월 4일
편집: Oleg Komarov 2014년 9월 4일
The dot product implementation might differ according to the input, i.e. dot product between two vectors as opposed between two matrices. Also, a quick search on the web exposes a few implementations of the dot product in the BLAS routines themselves and Matlab might be picking one or another according to different needs.
The example suggests zdotu.f
edit([matlabroot '/extern/examples/refbook/dotProductComplex.c']);
However, this doesn't tell us much about the dot product between matrices.
The difference in the results after startup calculation seems to be just chance. In fact, if you vary the number of random draws, the difference is not 0 anymore. To reset the state of the random generator without restarting, simply use
rng('default');
To address such a big discrepancy, we need to see what are the values of the dot products.
  댓글 수: 1
José Goulart
José Goulart 2014년 9월 8일
Indeed, that must be the cause.
Also, since the elements of the vectors span several orders of magnitude, adding them in different orders should produce fairly different results.
Thanks, everyone.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

추가 답변 (0개)

카테고리

Help CenterFile Exchange에서 Entering Commands에 대해 자세히 알아보기

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by