Zhenyue Zhang

2papers

2 Papers

LGJul 13, 2019
Minimal Sample Subspace Learning: Theory and Algorithms

Zhenyue Zhang, Yuqing Xia

Subspace segmentation or subspace learning is a challenging and complicated task in machine learning. This paper builds a primary frame and solid theoretical bases for the minimal subspace segmentation (MSS) of finite samples. Existence and conditional uniqueness of MSS are discussed with conditions generally satisfied in applications. Utilizing weak prior information of MSS, the minimality inspection of segments is further simplified to the prior detection of partitions. The MSS problem is then modeled as a computable optimization problem via self-expressiveness of samples. A closed form of representation matrices is first given for the self-expressiveness, and the connection of diagonal blocks is then addressed. The MSS model uses a rank restriction on the sum of segment ranks. Theoretically, it can retrieve the minimal sample subspaces that could be heavily intersected. The optimization problem is solved via a basic manifold conjugate gradient algorithm, alternative optimization and hybrid optimization, taking into account of solving both the primal MSS problem and its pseudo-dual problem. The MSS model is further modified for handling noisy data, and solved by an ADMM algorithm. The reported experiments show the strong ability of the MSS method on retrieving minimal sample subspaces that are heavily intersected.

MLOct 21, 2017
Principal Boundary on Riemannian Manifolds

Zhigang Yao, Zhenyue Zhang

We consider the classification problem and focus on nonlinear methods for classification on manifolds. For multivariate datasets lying on an embedded nonlinear Riemannian manifold within the higher-dimensional ambient space, we aim to acquire a classification boundary for the classes with labels, using the intrinsic metric on the manifolds. Motivated by finding an optimal boundary between the two classes, we invent a novel approach -- the principal boundary. From the perspective of classification, the principal boundary is defined as an optimal curve that moves in between the principal flows traced out from two classes of data, and at any point on the boundary, it maximizes the margin between the two classes. We estimate the boundary in quality with its direction, supervised by the two principal flows. We show that the principal boundary yields the usual decision boundary found by the support vector machine in the sense that locally, the two boundaries coincide. Some optimality and convergence properties of the random principal boundary and its population counterpart are also shown. We illustrate how to find, use and interpret the principal boundary with an application in real data.