MOE-Enhanced Explanable Deep Manifold Transformation for Complex Data Embedding and Visualization
It addresses a fundamental trade-off in dimensionality reduction for users in data engineering and visualization, offering a robust solution for real-world applications.
This paper tackles the challenge of achieving both high accuracy and strong explainability in dimensionality reduction for complex data like images, text, and tabular data, by introducing DMT-ME, which combines hyperbolic embeddings and Mixture of Experts to improve both aspects, with experiments showing superior performance in accuracy and explainability.
Dimensionality reduction (DR) plays a crucial role in various fields, including data engineering and visualization, by simplifying complex datasets while retaining essential information. However, achieving both high DR accuracy and strong explainability remains a fundamental challenge, especially for users dealing with high-dimensional data. Traditional DR methods often face a trade-off between precision and transparency, where optimizing for performance can lead to reduced explainability, and vice versa. This limitation is especially prominent in real-world applications such as image, tabular, and text data analysis, where both accuracy and explainability are critical. To address these challenges, this work introduces the MOE-based Explainable Deep Manifold Transformation (DMT-ME). The proposed approach combines hyperbolic embeddings, which effectively capture complex hierarchical structures, with Mixture of Experts (MOE) models, which dynamically allocate tasks based on input features. DMT-ME enhances DR accuracy by leveraging hyperbolic embeddings to represent the hierarchical nature of data, while also improving explainability by explicitly linking input data, embedding outcomes, and key features through the MOE structure. Extensive experiments demonstrate that DMT-ME consistently achieves superior performance in both DR accuracy and model explainability, making it a robust solution for complex data analysis. The code is available at https://github.com/zangzelin/code_dmtme