765 research outputs found

    A simple method for detecting chaos in nature

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    Chaos, or exponential sensitivity to small perturbations, appears everywhere in nature. Moreover, chaos is predicted to play diverse functional roles in living systems. A method for detecting chaos from empirical measurements should therefore be a key component of the biologist's toolkit. But, classic chaos-detection tools are highly sensitive to measurement noise and break down for common edge cases, making it difficult to detect chaos in domains, like biology, where measurements are noisy. However, newer tools promise to overcome these limitations. Here, we combine several such tools into an automated processing pipeline, and show that our pipeline can detect the presence (or absence) of chaos in noisy recordings, even for difficult edge cases. As a first-pass application of our pipeline, we show that heart rate variability is not chaotic as some have proposed, and instead reflects a stochastic process in both health and disease. Our tool is easy-to-use and freely available

    When can dictionary learning uniquely recover sparse data from subsamples?

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    Sparse coding or sparse dictionary learning has been widely used to recover underlying structure in many kinds of natural data. Here, we provide conditions guaranteeing when this recovery is universal; that is, when sparse codes and dictionaries are unique (up to natural symmetries). Our main tool is a useful lemma in combinatorial matrix theory that allows us to derive bounds on the sample sizes guaranteeing such uniqueness under various assumptions for how training data are generated. Whenever the conditions to one of our theorems are met, any sparsity-constrained learning algorithm that succeeds in reconstructing the data recovers the original sparse codes and dictionary. We also discuss potential applications to neuroscience and data analysis.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figures; IEEE Trans. Info. Theory, to appea
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