Subspace Estimation from Unbalanced and Incomplete Data Matrices: $\ell_{2,\infty}$ Statistical Guarantees
It addresses a fundamental challenge in matrix estimation for applications like tensor completion and PCA with missing data, offering incremental improvements in theoretical guarantees.
This paper tackles the problem of estimating the column space of a low-rank matrix from noisy and incomplete data, particularly in unbalanced cases where columns far exceed rows, by establishing new statistical guarantees for a spectral method that improve upon prior results when the column dimension is substantially larger.
This paper is concerned with estimating the column space of an unknown low-rank matrix $\boldsymbol{A}^{\star}\in\mathbb{R}^{d_{1}\times d_{2}}$, given noisy and partial observations of its entries. There is no shortage of scenarios where the observations -- while being too noisy to support faithful recovery of the entire matrix -- still convey sufficient information to enable reliable estimation of the column space of interest. This is particularly evident and crucial for the highly unbalanced case where the column dimension $d_{2}$ far exceeds the row dimension $d_{1}$, which is the focal point of the current paper. We investigate an efficient spectral method, which operates upon the sample Gram matrix with diagonal deletion. While this algorithmic idea has been studied before, we establish new statistical guarantees for this method in terms of both $\ell_{2}$ and $\ell_{2,\infty}$ estimation accuracy, which improve upon prior results if $d_{2}$ is substantially larger than $d_{1}$. To illustrate the effectiveness of our findings, we derive matching minimax lower bounds with respect to the noise levels, and develop consequences of our general theory for three applications of practical importance: (1) tensor completion from noisy data, (2) covariance estimation / principal component analysis with missing data, and (3) community recovery in bipartite graphs. Our theory leads to improved performance guarantees for all three cases.