1,140 research outputs found
Manifold Elastic Net: A Unified Framework for Sparse Dimension Reduction
It is difficult to find the optimal sparse solution of a manifold learning
based dimensionality reduction algorithm. The lasso or the elastic net
penalized manifold learning based dimensionality reduction is not directly a
lasso penalized least square problem and thus the least angle regression (LARS)
(Efron et al. \cite{LARS}), one of the most popular algorithms in sparse
learning, cannot be applied. Therefore, most current approaches take indirect
ways or have strict settings, which can be inconvenient for applications. In
this paper, we proposed the manifold elastic net or MEN for short. MEN
incorporates the merits of both the manifold learning based dimensionality
reduction and the sparse learning based dimensionality reduction. By using a
series of equivalent transformations, we show MEN is equivalent to the lasso
penalized least square problem and thus LARS is adopted to obtain the optimal
sparse solution of MEN. In particular, MEN has the following advantages for
subsequent classification: 1) the local geometry of samples is well preserved
for low dimensional data representation, 2) both the margin maximization and
the classification error minimization are considered for sparse projection
calculation, 3) the projection matrix of MEN improves the parsimony in
computation, 4) the elastic net penalty reduces the over-fitting problem, and
5) the projection matrix of MEN can be interpreted psychologically and
physiologically. Experimental evidence on face recognition over various popular
datasets suggests that MEN is superior to top level dimensionality reduction
algorithms.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figure
KCRC-LCD: Discriminative Kernel Collaborative Representation with Locality Constrained Dictionary for Visual Categorization
We consider the image classification problem via kernel collaborative
representation classification with locality constrained dictionary (KCRC-LCD).
Specifically, we propose a kernel collaborative representation classification
(KCRC) approach in which kernel method is used to improve the discrimination
ability of collaborative representation classification (CRC). We then measure
the similarities between the query and atoms in the global dictionary in order
to construct a locality constrained dictionary (LCD) for KCRC. In addition, we
discuss several similarity measure approaches in LCD and further present a
simple yet effective unified similarity measure whose superiority is validated
in experiments. There are several appealing aspects associated with LCD. First,
LCD can be nicely incorporated under the framework of KCRC. The LCD similarity
measure can be kernelized under KCRC, which theoretically links CRC and LCD
under the kernel method. Second, KCRC-LCD becomes more scalable to both the
training set size and the feature dimension. Example shows that KCRC is able to
perfectly classify data with certain distribution, while conventional CRC fails
completely. Comprehensive experiments on many public datasets also show that
KCRC-LCD is a robust discriminative classifier with both excellent performance
and good scalability, being comparable or outperforming many other
state-of-the-art approaches
Graph-based Semi-supervised Learning: Algorithms and Applications.
114 p.Graph-based semi-supervised learning have attracted large numbers of researchers and it is an important part of semi-supervised learning. Graph construction and semi-supervised embedding are two main steps in graph-based semi-supervised learning algorithms. In this thesis, we proposed two graph construction algorithms and two semi-supervised embedding algorithms. The main work of this thesis is summarized as follows:1. A new graph construction algorithm named Graph construction based on self-representativeness and Laplacian smoothness (SRLS) and several variants are proposed. Researches show that the coefficients obtained by data representation algorithms reflect the similarity between data samples and can be considered as a measurement of the similarity. This kind of measurement can be used for the weights of the edges between data samples in graph construction. Each column of the coefficient matrix obtained by data self-representation algorithms can be regarded as a new representation of original data. The new representations should have common features as the original data samples. Thus, if two data samples are close to each other in the original space, the corresponding representations should be highly similar. This constraint is called Laplacian smoothness.SRLS graph is based on l2-norm minimized data self-representation and Laplacian smoothness. Since the representation matrix obtained by l2 minimization is dense, a two phrase SRLS method (TPSRLS) is proposed to increase the sparsity of graph matrix. By extending the linear space to Hilbert space, two kernelized versions of SRLS are proposed. Besides, a direct solution to kernelized SRLS algorithm is also introduced.2. A new sparse graph construction algorithm named Sparse graph with Laplacian smoothness (SGLS) and several variants are proposed. SGLS graph algorithm is based on sparse representation and use Laplacian smoothness as a constraint (SGLS). A kernelized version of the SGLS algorithm and a direct solution to kernelized SGLS algorithm are also proposed. 3. SPP is a successful unsupervised learning method. To extend SPP to a semi-supervised embedding method, we introduce the idea of in-class constraints in CGE into SPP and propose a new semi-supervised method for data embedding named Constrained Sparsity Preserving Embedding (CSPE).4. The weakness of CSPE is that it cannot handle the new coming samples which means a cascade regression should be performed after the non-linear mapping is obtained by CSPE over the whole training samples. Inspired by FME, we add a regression term in the objective function to obtain an approximate linear projection simultaneously when non-linear embedding is estimated and proposed Flexible Constrained Sparsity Preserving Embedding (FCSPE).Extensive experiments on several datasets (including facial images, handwriting digits images and objects images) prove that the proposed algorithms can improve the state-of-the-art results
Graph-based Semi-supervised Learning: Algorithms and Applications.
114 p.Graph-based semi-supervised learning have attracted large numbers of researchers and it is an important part of semi-supervised learning. Graph construction and semi-supervised embedding are two main steps in graph-based semi-supervised learning algorithms. In this thesis, we proposed two graph construction algorithms and two semi-supervised embedding algorithms. The main work of this thesis is summarized as follows:1. A new graph construction algorithm named Graph construction based on self-representativeness and Laplacian smoothness (SRLS) and several variants are proposed. Researches show that the coefficients obtained by data representation algorithms reflect the similarity between data samples and can be considered as a measurement of the similarity. This kind of measurement can be used for the weights of the edges between data samples in graph construction. Each column of the coefficient matrix obtained by data self-representation algorithms can be regarded as a new representation of original data. The new representations should have common features as the original data samples. Thus, if two data samples are close to each other in the original space, the corresponding representations should be highly similar. This constraint is called Laplacian smoothness.SRLS graph is based on l2-norm minimized data self-representation and Laplacian smoothness. Since the representation matrix obtained by l2 minimization is dense, a two phrase SRLS method (TPSRLS) is proposed to increase the sparsity of graph matrix. By extending the linear space to Hilbert space, two kernelized versions of SRLS are proposed. Besides, a direct solution to kernelized SRLS algorithm is also introduced.2. A new sparse graph construction algorithm named Sparse graph with Laplacian smoothness (SGLS) and several variants are proposed. SGLS graph algorithm is based on sparse representation and use Laplacian smoothness as a constraint (SGLS). A kernelized version of the SGLS algorithm and a direct solution to kernelized SGLS algorithm are also proposed. 3. SPP is a successful unsupervised learning method. To extend SPP to a semi-supervised embedding method, we introduce the idea of in-class constraints in CGE into SPP and propose a new semi-supervised method for data embedding named Constrained Sparsity Preserving Embedding (CSPE).4. The weakness of CSPE is that it cannot handle the new coming samples which means a cascade regression should be performed after the non-linear mapping is obtained by CSPE over the whole training samples. Inspired by FME, we add a regression term in the objective function to obtain an approximate linear projection simultaneously when non-linear embedding is estimated and proposed Flexible Constrained Sparsity Preserving Embedding (FCSPE).Extensive experiments on several datasets (including facial images, handwriting digits images and objects images) prove that the proposed algorithms can improve the state-of-the-art results
Collaborative Representation based Classification for Face Recognition
By coding a query sample as a sparse linear combination of all training
samples and then classifying it by evaluating which class leads to the minimal
coding residual, sparse representation based classification (SRC) leads to
interesting results for robust face recognition. It is widely believed that the
l1- norm sparsity constraint on coding coefficients plays a key role in the
success of SRC, while its use of all training samples to collaboratively
represent the query sample is rather ignored. In this paper we discuss how SRC
works, and show that the collaborative representation mechanism used in SRC is
much more crucial to its success of face classification. The SRC is a special
case of collaborative representation based classification (CRC), which has
various instantiations by applying different norms to the coding residual and
coding coefficient. More specifically, the l1 or l2 norm characterization of
coding residual is related to the robustness of CRC to outlier facial pixels,
while the l1 or l2 norm characterization of coding coefficient is related to
the degree of discrimination of facial features. Extensive experiments were
conducted to verify the face recognition accuracy and efficiency of CRC with
different instantiations.Comment: It is a substantial revision of a previous conference paper (L.
Zhang, M. Yang, et al. "Sparse Representation or Collaborative
Representation: Which Helps Face Recognition?" in ICCV 2011
Relaxed 2-D Principal Component Analysis by Norm for Face Recognition
A relaxed two dimensional principal component analysis (R2DPCA) approach is
proposed for face recognition. Different to the 2DPCA, 2DPCA- and G2DPCA,
the R2DPCA utilizes the label information (if known) of training samples to
calculate a relaxation vector and presents a weight to each subset of training
data. A new relaxed scatter matrix is defined and the computed projection axes
are able to increase the accuracy of face recognition. The optimal -norms
are selected in a reasonable range. Numerical experiments on practical face
databased indicate that the R2DPCA has high generalization ability and can
achieve a higher recognition rate than state-of-the-art methods.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Constructing a Non-Negative Low Rank and Sparse Graph with Data-Adaptive Features
This paper aims at constructing a good graph for discovering intrinsic data
structures in a semi-supervised learning setting. Firstly, we propose to build
a non-negative low-rank and sparse (referred to as NNLRS) graph for the given
data representation. Specifically, the weights of edges in the graph are
obtained by seeking a nonnegative low-rank and sparse matrix that represents
each data sample as a linear combination of others. The so-obtained NNLRS-graph
can capture both the global mixture of subspaces structure (by the low
rankness) and the locally linear structure (by the sparseness) of the data,
hence is both generative and discriminative. Secondly, as good features are
extremely important for constructing a good graph, we propose to learn the data
embedding matrix and construct the graph jointly within one framework, which is
termed as NNLRS with embedded features (referred to as NNLRS-EF). Extensive
experiments on three publicly available datasets demonstrate that the proposed
method outperforms the state-of-the-art graph construction method by a large
margin for both semi-supervised classification and discriminative analysis,
which verifies the effectiveness of our proposed method
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