Joint Projection and Dictionary Learning using Low-rank Regularization and Graph Constraints
This work addresses the challenge of robust dimensionality reduction and classification for noisy image data, representing an incremental improvement over existing joint learning methods.
The paper tackled the problem of learning a discriminative dictionary and robust projection matrix from noisy data, achieving improved classification accuracy by integrating low-rank regularization and graph constraints, with experimental validation on benchmark datasets showing effectiveness in noisy conditions.
In this paper, we aim at learning simultaneously a discriminative dictionary and a robust projection matrix from noisy data. The joint learning, makes the learned projection and dictionary a better fit for each other, so a more accurate classification can be obtained. However, current prevailing joint dimensionality reduction and dictionary learning methods, would fail when the training samples are noisy or heavily corrupted. To address this issue, we propose a joint projection and dictionary learning using low-rank regularization and graph constraints (JPDL-LR). Specifically, the discrimination of the dictionary is achieved by imposing Fisher criterion on the coding coefficients. In addition, our method explicitly encodes the local structure of data by incorporating a graph regularization term, that further improves the discriminative ability of the projection matrix. Inspired by recent advances of low-rank representation for removing outliers and noise, we enforce a low-rank constraint on sub-dictionaries of all classes to make them more compact and robust to noise. Experimental results on several benchmark datasets verify the effectiveness and robustness of our method for both dimensionality reduction and image classification, especially when the data contains considerable noise or variations.