2,176 research outputs found
Joint & Progressive Learning from High-Dimensional Data for Multi-Label Classification
Despite the fact that nonlinear subspace learning techniques (e.g. manifold
learning) have successfully applied to data representation, there is still room
for improvement in explainability (explicit mapping), generalization
(out-of-samples), and cost-effectiveness (linearization). To this end, a novel
linearized subspace learning technique is developed in a joint and progressive
way, called \textbf{j}oint and \textbf{p}rogressive \textbf{l}earning
str\textbf{a}teg\textbf{y} (J-Play), with its application to multi-label
classification. The J-Play learns high-level and semantically meaningful
feature representation from high-dimensional data by 1) jointly performing
multiple subspace learning and classification to find a latent subspace where
samples are expected to be better classified; 2) progressively learning
multi-coupled projections to linearly approach the optimal mapping bridging the
original space with the most discriminative subspace; 3) locally embedding
manifold structure in each learnable latent subspace. Extensive experiments are
performed to demonstrate the superiority and effectiveness of the proposed
method in comparison with previous state-of-the-art methods.Comment: accepted in ECCV 201
Low-Rank Discriminative Least Squares Regression for Image Classification
Latest least squares regression (LSR) methods mainly try to learn slack
regression targets to replace strict zero-one labels. However, the difference
of intra-class targets can also be highlighted when enlarging the distance
between different classes, and roughly persuing relaxed targets may lead to the
problem of overfitting. To solve above problems, we propose a low-rank
discriminative least squares regression model (LRDLSR) for multi-class image
classification. Specifically, LRDLSR class-wisely imposes low-rank constraint
on the intra-class regression targets to encourage its compactness and
similarity. Moreover, LRDLSR introduces an additional regularization term on
the learned targets to avoid the problem of overfitting. These two improvements
are helpful to learn a more discriminative projection for regression and thus
achieving better classification performance. Experimental results over a range
of image databases demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed LRDLSR method
Similarity Learning via Kernel Preserving Embedding
Data similarity is a key concept in many data-driven applications. Many
algorithms are sensitive to similarity measures. To tackle this fundamental
problem, automatically learning of similarity information from data via
self-expression has been developed and successfully applied in various models,
such as low-rank representation, sparse subspace learning, semi-supervised
learning. However, it just tries to reconstruct the original data and some
valuable information, e.g., the manifold structure, is largely ignored. In this
paper, we argue that it is beneficial to preserve the overall relations when we
extract similarity information. Specifically, we propose a novel similarity
learning framework by minimizing the reconstruction error of kernel matrices,
rather than the reconstruction error of original data adopted by existing work.
Taking the clustering task as an example to evaluate our method, we observe
considerable improvements compared to other state-of-the-art methods. More
importantly, our proposed framework is very general and provides a novel and
fundamental building block for many other similarity-based tasks. Besides, our
proposed kernel preserving opens up a large number of possibilities to embed
high-dimensional data into low-dimensional space.Comment: Published in AAAI 201
Neural Collaborative Subspace Clustering
We introduce the Neural Collaborative Subspace Clustering, a neural model
that discovers clusters of data points drawn from a union of low-dimensional
subspaces. In contrast to previous attempts, our model runs without the aid of
spectral clustering. This makes our algorithm one of the kinds that can
gracefully scale to large datasets. At its heart, our neural model benefits
from a classifier which determines whether a pair of points lies on the same
subspace or not. Essential to our model is the construction of two affinity
matrices, one from the classifier and the other from a notion of subspace
self-expressiveness, to supervise training in a collaborative scheme. We
thoroughly assess and contrast the performance of our model against various
state-of-the-art clustering algorithms including deep subspace-based ones.Comment: Accepted to ICML 201
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