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Friday, January 27, 2012

Learning Sparse Representations of High Dimensional Data on Large Scale Dictionaries

Using random projections to control the information flow from layer to layer in dictionary learning, this is what  Zhen James Xiang seems to be saying in his NIPS11 presentation on Learning Sparse Representations of High Dimensional Data on Large Scale Dictionaries. The attendant  MATLAB Toolbox is here and is featured in the Matrix Factorization Jungle Page. The paper is: Learning sparse representations of high dimensional data on large scale dictionaries by Zhen James Xiang , Hao XuPeter Ramadge. The abstract reads:

Learning sparse representations on data adaptive dictionaries is a state-of-the-art method for modeling data. But when the dictionary is large and the data dimension is high, it is a computationally challenging problem. We explore three aspects of the problem. First, we derive new, greatly improved screening tests that quickly identify codewords that are guaranteed to have zero weights. Second, we study the properties of random projections in the context of learning sparse representations. Finally, we develop a hierarchical framework that uses incremental random projections and screening to learn, in small stages, a hierarchically structured dictionary for sparse representations. Empirical results show that our framework can learn informative hierarchical sparse representations more efficiently.
 And some Supplemental material.

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2 comments:

  1. Thanks for posting this, Igor. As the lead author of the paper, I'd like to add that other than the idea of using random projections to control information flow, another important result in the paper is lasso screening. This is a technique for identifying the codewords that are guaranteed to receive zero weights in the lasso problem. It can greatly improve the speed of solving lasso problems. We also have another paper on lasso screening with some of our newest results.

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