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Research PaperResearchia:202605.12028

Fixed-Point Neural Optimal Transport without Implicit Differentiation

Yesom Park

Abstract

We propose an implicit neural formulation of optimal transport that eliminates adversarial min--max optimization and multi-network architectures commonly used in existing approaches. Our key idea is to parameterize a single potential in the Kantorovich dual and reformulate the associated c-transform as a proximal fixed-point problem. This yields a stable single-network framework in which dual feasibility is enforced exactly through proximal optimality conditions rather than adversarial training....

Submitted: May 12, 2026Subjects: Mathematics; Mathematics

Description / Details

We propose an implicit neural formulation of optimal transport that eliminates adversarial min--max optimization and multi-network architectures commonly used in existing approaches. Our key idea is to parameterize a single potential in the Kantorovich dual and reformulate the associated c-transform as a proximal fixed-point problem. This yields a stable single-network framework in which dual feasibility is enforced exactly through proximal optimality conditions rather than adversarial training. Despite the inner fixed-point computation, gradients can be computed without differentiating through the fixed-point iterations, enabling efficient training without requiring implicit differentiation. We further establish convergence of stochastic gradient descent. The resulting framework is efficient, scalable, and broadly applicable: it simultaneously recovers forward and backward transport maps and naturally extends to class-conditional settings. Experiments on high-dimensional Gaussian benchmarks, physical datasets, and image translation tasks demonstrate strong transport accuracy together with improved training stability and favorable computational and memory efficiency.


Source: arXiv:2605.10792v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.10792v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.10792v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.10792v1

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Date:
May 12, 2026
Topic:
Mathematics
Area:
Mathematics
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