6,855 research outputs found
Quantized Compressive K-Means
The recent framework of compressive statistical learning aims at designing
tractable learning algorithms that use only a heavily compressed
representation-or sketch-of massive datasets. Compressive K-Means (CKM) is such
a method: it estimates the centroids of data clusters from pooled, non-linear,
random signatures of the learning examples. While this approach significantly
reduces computational time on very large datasets, its digital implementation
wastes acquisition resources because the learning examples are compressed only
after the sensing stage. The present work generalizes the sketching procedure
initially defined in Compressive K-Means to a large class of periodic
nonlinearities including hardware-friendly implementations that compressively
acquire entire datasets. This idea is exemplified in a Quantized Compressive
K-Means procedure, a variant of CKM that leverages 1-bit universal quantization
(i.e. retaining the least significant bit of a standard uniform quantizer) as
the periodic sketch nonlinearity. Trading for this resource-efficient signature
(standard in most acquisition schemes) has almost no impact on the clustering
performances, as illustrated by numerical experiments
Ward type identities for the 2d Anderson model at weak disorder
Using the particular momentum conservation laws in dimension d=2, we can
rewrite the Anderson model in terms of low momentum long range fields, at the
price of introducing electron loops. The corresponding loops satisfy a Ward
type identity, hence are much smaller than expected. This fact should be useful
for a study of the weak-coupling model in the middle of the spectrum of the
free Hamiltonian.Comment: LaTeX 2e document using AMS symbols, 25 pages and 32 eps figure
Renormalization of the 2-point function of the Hubbard model at half-filling
We prove that the two dimensional Hubbard model at finite temperature T and
half-filling is analytic in the coupling constant in a radius at least . We also study the self-energy through a new two-particle irreducible
expansion and prove that this model is not a Fermi liquid, but a Luttinger
liquid with logarithmic corrections. The techniques used are borrowed from
constructive field theory so the result is mathematically rigorous and
completely non-perturbative.
Together with earlier results on the existence of two dimensional Fermi
liquids, this new result proves that the nature of interacting Fermi systems in
two dimensions depends on the shape of the Fermi surface.Comment: 45 pages, 28 figure
The Hubbard model at half-filling, part III: the lower bound on the self-energy
We complete the proof that the two-dimensional Hubbard model at half-filling
is not a Fermi liquid in the mathematically precise sense of Salmhofer, by
establishing a lower bound on a second derivative in momentum of the first
non-trivial self-energy graph.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figure
Scaling behaviour of three-dimensional group field theory
Group field theory is a generalization of matrix models, with triangulated
pseudomanifolds as Feynman diagrams and state sum invariants as Feynman
amplitudes. In this paper, we consider Boulatov's three-dimensional model and
its Freidel-Louapre positive regularization (hereafter the BFL model) with a
?ultraviolet' cutoff, and study rigorously their scaling behavior in the large
cutoff limit. We prove an optimal bound on large order Feynman amplitudes,
which shows that the BFL model is perturbatively more divergent than the
former. We then upgrade this result to the constructive level, using, in a
self-contained way, the modern tools of constructive field theory: we construct
the Borel sum of the BFL perturbative series via a convergent ?cactus'
expansion, and establish the ?ultraviolet' scaling of its Borel radius. Our
method shows how the ?sum over trian- gulations' in quantum gravity can be
tamed rigorously, and paves the way for the renormalization program in group
field theory
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