4 research outputs found

    Pattern vectors from algebraic graph theory

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    Graphstructures have proven computationally cumbersome for pattern analysis. The reason for this is that, before graphs can be converted to pattern vectors, correspondences must be established between the nodes of structures which are potentially of different size. To overcome this problem, in this paper, we turn to the spectral decomposition of the Laplacian matrix. We show how the elements of the spectral matrix for the Laplacian can be used to construct symmetric polynomials that are permutation invariants. The coefficients of these polynomials can be used as graph features which can be encoded in a vectorial manner. We extend this representation to graphs in which there are unary attributes on the nodes and binary attributes on the edges by using the spectral decomposition of a Hermitian property matrix that can be viewed as a complex analogue of the Laplacian. To embed the graphs in a pattern space, we explore whether the vectors of invariants can be embedded in a low- dimensional space using a number of alternative strategies, including principal components analysis ( PCA), multidimensional scaling ( MDS), and locality preserving projection ( LPP). Experimentally, we demonstrate that the embeddings result in well- defined graph clusters. Our experiments with the spectral representation involve both synthetic and real- world data. The experiments with synthetic data demonstrate that the distances between spectral feature vectors can be used to discriminate between graphs on the basis of their structure. The real- world experiments show that the method can be used to locate clusters of graphs

    Discovering Shape Classes using Tree Edit-Distance and Pairwise Clustering

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    This paper describes work aimed at the unsupervised learning of shape-classes from shock trees. We commence by considering how to compute the edit distance between weighted trees. We show how to transform the tree edit distance problem into a series of maximum weight clique problems, and show how to use relaxation labeling to find an approximate solution. This allows us to compute a set of pairwise distances between graph-structures. We show how the edit distances can be used to compute a matrix of pairwise affinities using χ² statistics. We present a maximum likelihood method for clustering the graphs by iteratively updating the elements of the affinity matrix. This involves interleaved steps for updating the affinity matrix using an eigendecomposition method and updating the cluster membership indicators. We illustrate the new tree clustering framework on shock-graphs extracted from the silhouettes of 2D shapes

    Matching hierarchical structures for shape recognition

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    In this thesis we aim to develop a framework for clustering trees and rep- resenting and learning a generative model of graph structures from a set of training samples. The approach is applied to the problem of the recognition and classification of shape abstracted in terms of its morphological skeleton. We make five contributions. The first is an algorithm to approximate tree edit-distance using relaxation labeling. The second is the introduction of the tree union, a representation capable of representing the modes of structural variation present in a set of trees. The third is an information theoretic approach to learning a generative model of tree structures from a training set. While the skeletal abstraction of shape was chosen mainly as a exper- imental vehicle, we, nonetheless, make some contributions to the fields of skeleton extraction and its graph representation. In particular, our fourth contribution is the development of a skeletonization method that corrects curvature effects in the Hamilton-Jacobi framework, improving its localiza- tion and noise sensitivity. Finally, we propose a shape-measure capable of characterizing shapes abstracted in terms of their skeleton. This measure has a number of interesting properties. In particular, it varies smoothly as the shape is deformed and can be easily computed using the presented skeleton extraction algorithm. Each chapter presents an experimental analysis of the proposed approaches applied to shape recognition problems

    Learning Graph Models of Shape

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