1,491 research outputs found
Stable rank of
It is shown that, for an arbitrary free and minimal -action on a
compact Hausdorff space , the crossed product C*-algebra
always has stable rank one, i.e., invertible
elements are dense. This generalizes a result of Alboiu and Lutley on -actions.
In fact, for any free and minimal topological dynamical system ,
where is a countable discrete amenable group, if it has the uniform
Rokhlin property and Cuntz comparison of open sets, then the crossed product
C*-algebra has stable rank one. Moreover, in this
case, the C*-algebra absorbs the Jiang-Su algebra
tensorially if, and only if, it has strict comparison of positive elements
Oracle Based Active Set Algorithm for Scalable Elastic Net Subspace Clustering
State-of-the-art subspace clustering methods are based on expressing each
data point as a linear combination of other data points while regularizing the
matrix of coefficients with , or nuclear norms.
regularization is guaranteed to give a subspace-preserving affinity (i.e.,
there are no connections between points from different subspaces) under broad
theoretical conditions, but the clusters may not be connected. and
nuclear norm regularization often improve connectivity, but give a
subspace-preserving affinity only for independent subspaces. Mixed ,
and nuclear norm regularizations offer a balance between the
subspace-preserving and connectedness properties, but this comes at the cost of
increased computational complexity. This paper studies the geometry of the
elastic net regularizer (a mixture of the and norms) and uses
it to derive a provably correct and scalable active set method for finding the
optimal coefficients. Our geometric analysis also provides a theoretical
justification and a geometric interpretation for the balance between the
connectedness (due to regularization) and subspace-preserving (due to
regularization) properties for elastic net subspace clustering. Our
experiments show that the proposed active set method not only achieves
state-of-the-art clustering performance, but also efficiently handles
large-scale datasets.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted to CVPR 2016 for oral presentatio
Cluster-guided Asymmetric Contrastive Learning for Unsupervised Person Re-Identification
Unsupervised person re-identification (Re-ID) aims to match pedestrian images
from different camera views in unsupervised setting. Existing methods for
unsupervised person Re-ID are usually built upon the pseudo labels from
clustering. However, the quality of clustering depends heavily on the quality
of the learned features, which are overwhelmingly dominated by the colors in
images especially in the unsupervised setting. In this paper, we propose a
Cluster-guided Asymmetric Contrastive Learning (CACL) approach for unsupervised
person Re-ID, in which cluster structure is leveraged to guide the feature
learning in a properly designed asymmetric contrastive learning framework. To
be specific, we propose a novel cluster-level contrastive loss to help the
siamese network effectively mine the invariance in feature learning with
respect to the cluster structure within and between different data augmentation
views, respectively. Extensive experiments conducted on three benchmark
datasets demonstrate superior performance of our proposal
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