159 research outputs found
Stable Principal Component Pursuit
In this paper, we study the problem of recovering a low-rank matrix (the
principal components) from a high-dimensional data matrix despite both small
entry-wise noise and gross sparse errors. Recently, it has been shown that a
convex program, named Principal Component Pursuit (PCP), can recover the
low-rank matrix when the data matrix is corrupted by gross sparse errors. We
further prove that the solution to a related convex program (a relaxed PCP)
gives an estimate of the low-rank matrix that is simultaneously stable to small
entrywise noise and robust to gross sparse errors. More precisely, our result
shows that the proposed convex program recovers the low-rank matrix even though
a positive fraction of its entries are arbitrarily corrupted, with an error
bound proportional to the noise level. We present simulation results to support
our result and demonstrate that the new convex program accurately recovers the
principal components (the low-rank matrix) under quite broad conditions. To our
knowledge, this is the first result that shows the classical Principal
Component Analysis (PCA), optimal for small i.i.d. noise, can be made robust to
gross sparse errors; or the first that shows the newly proposed PCP can be made
stable to small entry-wise perturbations.Comment: 5-page paper submitted to ISIT 201
A variational approach to stable principal component pursuit
We introduce a new convex formulation for stable principal component pursuit
(SPCP) to decompose noisy signals into low-rank and sparse representations. For
numerical solutions of our SPCP formulation, we first develop a convex
variational framework and then accelerate it with quasi-Newton methods. We
show, via synthetic and real data experiments, that our approach offers
advantages over the classical SPCP formulations in scalability and practical
parameter selection.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
An Improved Traffic Matrix Decomposition Method with Frequency-Domain Regularization
We propose a novel network traffic matrix decomposition method named Stable
Principal Component Pursuit with Frequency-Domain Regularization (SPCP-FDR),
which improves the Stable Principal Component Pursuit (SPCP) method by using a
frequency-domain noise regularization function. An experiment demonstrates the
feasibility of this new decomposition method.Comment: Accepted to IEICE Transactions on Information and System
Ensemble Joint Sparse Low Rank Matrix Decomposition for Thermography Diagnosis System
Composite is widely used in the aircraft industry and it is essential for manufacturers to monitor its health and quality. The most commonly found defects of composite are debonds and delamination. Different inner defects with complex irregular shape is difficult to be diagnosed by using conventional thermal imaging methods. In this paper, an ensemble joint sparse low rank matrix decomposition (EJSLRMD) algorithm is proposed by applying the optical pulse thermography (OPT) diagnosis system. The proposed algorithm jointly models the low rank and sparse pattern by using concatenated feature space. In particular, the weak defects information can be separated from strong noise and the resolution contrast of the defects has significantly been improved. Ensemble iterative sparse modelling are conducted to further enhance the weak information as well as reducing the computational cost. In order to show the robustness and efficacy of the model, experiments are conducted to detect the inner debond on multiple carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) composites. A comparative analysis is presented with general OPT algorithms. Not withstand above, the proposed model has been evaluated on synthetic data and compared with other low rank and sparse matrix decomposition algorithms
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