MLLGSTMENov 23, 2022

Kernel PCA for multivariate extremes

arXiv:2211.13172v26 citationsh-index: 56
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This provides a method for analyzing extreme value dependence in multivariate data, though it appears incremental as it applies existing kernel PCA to this specific domain.

The authors tackled the problem of analyzing dependence structure in multivariate extremes using kernel PCA, demonstrating it can effectively identify clusters and reduce dimensions with theoretical guarantees on performance.

We propose kernel PCA as a method for analyzing the dependence structure of multivariate extremes and demonstrate that it can be a powerful tool for clustering and dimension reduction. Our work provides some theoretical insight into the preimages obtained by kernel PCA, demonstrating that under certain conditions they can effectively identify clusters in the data. We build on these new insights to characterize rigorously the performance of kernel PCA based on an extremal sample, i.e., the angular part of random vectors for which the radius exceeds a large threshold. More specifically, we focus on the asymptotic dependence of multivariate extremes characterized by the angular or spectral measure in extreme value theory and provide a careful analysis in the case where the extremes are generated from a linear factor model. We give theoretical guarantees on the performance of kernel PCA preimages of such extremes by leveraging their asymptotic distribution together with Davis-Kahan perturbation bounds. Our theoretical findings are complemented with numerical experiments illustrating the finite sample performance of our methods.

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