This invention relates to machine learning techniques for processing data for recognition and classification. More particularly, the invention relates to data representation and invariance learning, and to the modeling of the represented data.
Large quantities or volumes of raw data can be generated and manipulated by today's computers. Yet, the large volumes of raw data may be meaningful only when the data is mathematically simplified (e.g., classified) or described by models. The models may describe the raw data with a reduced number of variables, and thereby allow the volumes of raw data to be advantageously compressed and processed. The modeling of data can be based on theory (e.g., physics) or on statistical analysis. Common statistical analysis methods that are used for data modeling include maximum likelihood estimation, principal component analysis (PCA), and discriminative methods.
Recent progress in discriminative learning, support vector machines and regularization theory have encouraged the view that a data model may be estimated or learned from the raw data by minimizing penalty functions, e.g., linear classification constraints, on the model. An important aspect of these formalisms is that their learning algorithms generate solvable convex programs having convenient computational properties. Traditional machine learning methods have focussed on estimating models (generative or discriminative) from vectorial data. However, non-vectorial data or non-Euclidean data such as strings, images, audio and video require invariance and representation learning to recast the data in a form from which a useful model can be learned.
The proper representation for images and visual data is critical for computer vision applications. The initial manner in which visual or image information is parameterized, image features are extracted, and images are mathematically described or otherwise specified is an active area of current research. The success of subsequent computer vision application modules (e.g., for image recognition, segmentation, tracking, and modeling) often rests on the initial representation chosen. Image invariance has been successful exploited to represent data for computer vision applications. For example, in image recognition or matching modules, the solution of the so-called correspondence problem utilize the permutational invariance of pixels in images. See e.g., S. Gold, C. P. Lu, A Rangarajan, S. Pappu, and E. Mjolsness, “New algorithms for 2D and 3D point matching: Pose estimation and correspondence,” Neural Information Processing Systems 7, 1995. Further, flexible specification of permutational invariance and other image invariants and their reliable estimation remains an important goal of machine learning in computer vision applications.
Prior attempts in uncovering invariant representations often involved particular iterative methods, which unfortunately are incompatible or inconsistent within subsequent model estimation algorithms. Further, these iterative methods also suffer from local minima, which lead to false or unreliable results. For example, B. Frey and N. Jojic, “Estimating mixture models of images and inferring spatial transformation using the EM algorithm,” Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 1999, describes using learning transformations for generative models that require an iterative Expectation Maximization (EM) or variational implementation, and also a discrete enumeration of all possible transforms. Similarly, other known iterative techniques such as congealing may uncover image rotations, but also suffer from local minima and do not scale to model estimation frameworks (e.g., discriminative model frameworks). Further, for example, known correspondence algorithms for image registration and alignment also suffer from local minima problems and require relaxation or annealing.
Consideration is now being given to improving methods for uncovering invariant representations of data and to improving statistical methods for estimating models for the data. The data types considered include image and video data and also other data types (e.g., alphanumeric data, and audio, etc.). Attention is particularly directed to data analysis for image processing applications.
The invention provides methods and systems for compressing, transmitting and reconstructing data for video, audio and other applications.
A convex invariance learning framework is established for processing input data. In this framework, data is represented as a random collection of tuples. For example, images are represented as “a bag of pixels”. Input image data, which may originally be obtained in standard vector representation as ordered collection of n-tuples (e.g., as ordered collections of pixel X and Y co-ordinates and intensity I), is reorganized by associating the X and Y spatial co-ordinates of a pixel with the pixel's intensity value I. This reorganization allows the order of pixels in the input image data to be randomnized to obtain the “bag of pixels” representation.
The invariant characteristics or properties of the data type (e.g., pixel correspondence in face images) are recovered from the randomized collection of n-tuples by maximum likelihood analysis. Each input image vector is associated with a variable transformation matrix that acts on the vector to reorder the collection of n-tuples in the vector. The transformation matrices may, for example, be permutation matrices or stochastic matrices that approximate permutation matrices. A convex cost function, whose variables are the input data vectors and their associated transformation matrices, is defined over a constrained space of the transformation matrices (e.g., permutation matrices). This cost function is minimized to find the most likely permutation matrices and pixel permutations in image data. This minimization process reestablishes common registration or correspondence between pixels in the image data. The minimization process also invariantly clusters or moves the image data vectors in to a linear subspace (“eigenspace”) where they can be described or modeled by a reduced number of variables. The minimization process may be carried out using numerical techniques or kernel methods.
Principal component analysis may be used to find a sufficient or significant set of N eigenvectors (E) that span the linear subspace. Test results for face image data shows that the number N of significant eigenvectors can be a small number (e.g., N=20).
Input image data may be compressed by using the set of N eigenvectors as a basis set to encode the data. The input image data is first invariantly transformed (i.e., permuted) to the linear subspace spanned by the set of N eigenvectors and then projected on them (eigenvectors) to obtain a set of N scalar coefficients or eigenvalues. The set of N scalar coefficients provides a compressed representation of the image data. The compressed data can be transmitted as a set of N coefficients to a receiver. The transmitted image may be reconstructed at the receiver as a linear function of the set of N eigenvectors using the set of N coefficients.
Further features of the invention, its nature, and various advantages will be more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference characters represent like elements throughout, and in which:
a and 1b are schematic illustrations of a vectorization/rasterization process by which face image data is represented as ordered collections of pixel data.
c. is a schematic illustration of the correspondence between pixels of the face image data of
a and 2b respectively are schematic illustrations of a vector data element x and an invariant surface or path over which the vector data element can be invariantly moved by application of transformation operators in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
a is a scatter plot of an original set of data in R3.
b and 3c are schematic illustrations of exemplary invariant data manifolds of the data of
a and 7b are schematic illustrations of a vectorized representation of an image datum and its representation as “a bag of pixels” in accordance with the present invention.
a illustrates a few of a set of (X, Y) point images of digits 3 and 9 that were used as an input set for joint invariance and model learning in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
b illustrates reconstructed images obtained by applying conventional PCA to the data of
c illustrates reconstructed images obtained by applying PCA to the data of
a illustrates a few face images of an individual's face that were used as an input set for joint invariance and model learning in accordance with the principles of the present invention.
b illustrates reconstructed images obtained by applying conventional PCA to the data of
c illustrates reconstructed images obtained by applying PCA to the data of
a and 11b are graphs comparing the squared reconstruction errors for audio spectrograms reconstructed using conventional PCA and reconstructed using joint invariance and model learning processes in accordance with the present invention.
Further included in Appendices A and B are listings of “MATLAB” source code of computer programs for minimizing cost functions in accordance with the present invention.
The present disclosure provides methods and systems for compressing, transmitting and reconstructing data for video, audio and other applications. The methods and systems utilize model estimates of the data to compress data. The methods and systems establish data invariance and representation parameters for assembling training data suitable for model estimation. The methods and systems may utilize convex programming techniques to determine or learn the suitable invariance and data representation parameters for a data type. The learned invariance and data representation parameters for a data type are employed to generate training data for the model learning or estimation.
In an inventive method, the learning of the data invariance or representation parameters for a data type is explicitly conducted in conjunction with the learning or estimation of a suitable model for the data type. The learnt representation parameters and the learnt model may be used to encode, represent and compress sets of data, for example, for transmission. The compressed sets of data may, for example, be video, audio or other data types
Exemplary process 400 and system 500 for compression, transmission, and reconstruction of data are described herein with reference to
A feature of the learning systems and methods, which is common to all applications discussed herein, relates to transformation of a data set (“the original data set”) under investigation into a transformed or normalized data set. In one embodiment the transformed or normalized data set is an equivalent enlarged or augmented data set (the “invariant data manifold”). An enlarged or augmented data set is useful for invariance analysis because the data in an original data set (e.g., image data), which is submitted for analysis, is usually represented in a form that does not preserve or contain information on the invariance or relationships between data elements. Image data, for example, is often represented by vectors (e.g., vector x1
a shows an exemplary digitized two-dimensional image 100 of a person's face, which is represented by a vector x1 . Vector x1 sequentially lists pixel co-ordinates and pixel intensity (i.e. pixel tuples (X, Y, I)) in image 100. Vector image data like x1 is prone to corruption as the acquired images/pixels of the person's face can morph, rotate, translate or permute.
The invariant data manifolds of the present invention are designed to supplement or restore image invariance information, which may be missing from the original data sets (e.g., vectors x1 and x2) that are submitted for invariance analysis. The invariant data manifolds may be used as data for further analysis (e.g., as training data for model learning), or as a suitably reformulated data set for face recognition or surveillance algorithms.
The data in an invariant data manifold includes data generated by applying suitable invariant transforms or operators “A” to the data elements in the original data set. An initial step in the invariance learning methods disclosed herein is to find or determine the suitable invariant transformation operators A. The invariant transformation operators A, which are initially undetermined, may be designed to effect one or more invariant operations suitable to the data type under consideration. It will be understood that the operators A acting on vector data elements (e.g., vectors x1 and x2) may be represented as matrices. The exemplary invariant operations for image data may include permutations, rotations, translation and scaling; for audio data may include pitch and ambient changes; for biological or molecular structure data may include protein folding, insertions or deletions; and for computer databases may include field swapping, reformatting, and scaling.
The suitable invariant transformation operators A are applied to each data element in the original data set to generate equivalent invariant representations of the data element. These equivalent invariant representations form an invariant surface or path over which the data element can be invariantly moved.
a and 3b show, for example, how the consideration of an invariant data manifold instead of merely the original data set can be beneficial for model learning or estimation and for data compression.
By its mobility, the image data as shown in
In practice, learning data invariance, generating invariant data manifolds and fitting or learning models from the invariant date manifolds in the manner described with reference to
Data of the type, which has been modeled, may be represented or encoded using the model parameters. For example, each image data point in
With reference to
Next at steps 420 and 430, a convex invariance learning framework is established. At step 420, suitable invariant transformation matrices A that are later used to generate additional invariant representations of raw input data 510 are identified for this framework. Each input data point 510, for example, is associated with an affine transformation matrix At that operates linearly on the data point as follows: Σj Atij Xtj. The affine matrices At are identified by subjecting them to a set of linear or non-linear equality/inequality constraints to limit or select the type of allowed invariant transformation of the data points. At step 430, a cost function C(A1, . . . , At) is defined for learning data invariance (e.g., to investigate the range of likely invariant transformations At of the data points). The optimal invariant transformations At of the data points are those which minimize C(A). The cost function may be selected to be consistent with later data model estimation (at step 460). The cost function C(A) is selected to be convex. The convexity of C(A) ensures a unique 30 solution A at which C(A) is a minimum. Further, the domain of C(A) in subsequent computations is limited by constraints on the affine matrices. The affine matrices may be constrained in subsequent computations for minimizing the cost function by linear constraints, for example, in the following manner:
The linear (or non-linear) constraints define a convex hull of constraints on the affine matrices.
The constraints on the affine matrices A may be empirically selected, for example, in consideration of the expected invariant properties of the data. For image data, the affine matrices may, for example, be limited to those having one or more of the following data transformation properties or characteristics: permutation and correspondence, permutation sub-groups, clustering, latent variable, selection, translation, rotation and scaling. Optionally, an additional penalty function Pt may be applied to each matrix A to favor certain invariant configurations over other invariant configurations (i.e. to achieve soft invariance).
C(A)←C(A)+ΣtPt(At).
At step 430 of process 400, data model estimation criteria are integrated into the convex invariance framework set up at step 420. In the integrated framework, the cost function C (A) is defined to be an explicit convex function of the transformation matrices A and the data set X. The model estimation criteria may, for example, be based on standard principles of maximum likelihood estimation or discriminative estimation. When conventional Gaussian maximum likelihood estimation principles are implemented, the cost function C(A) may, for example, be defined as either as a Gaussian mean estimator, C(A)=trace(Cov(A X)), or a Gaussian covariance estimator C(A)=|Cov(Ax)|. (For convenience in the description of process 400, more mathematical formulations of both Gaussian estimators and other equations are provided herein only after description of all the steps of process 400). Both Gaussian estimators have the beneficial invariance learning property of transforming or moving data Xi in to a low-dimension linear subspace (e.g.,
At step 440 of process 400, the optimal matrices Ai (min) that minimize the cost function C(A) are determined. Processor 550 may compute or solve for the optimal matrices Ai (min), using, for example, quadratic or sequential quadratic programming or other programming techniques (e.g. iterated singular value decomposition (SVD,) or Kuhn-Munkres algorithms). The programming techniques that are used for computing the optimal matrices Ai (min), may be used in conjunction with suitably defined bounds on the cost function. The optimized data vectors Ai (min) Xi, also are established at step 440. These optimized data vectors correspond to data Xi that has been invariantly relocated by application of the optimal matrices Ai (min) in to a low-dimension linear subspace (e.g.,
At optional step 450, the optimal matrices Ai (min) and the optimized data vectors Ai (min) Xi may be stored or provided for future use. The optimized data vectors Ai (min) Xi may, for example, be stored as a training data set 520 in system 500. The optimal matrices Ai (min) and optimized data vectors Ai (min) Xi also may be provided to data encoder 560 (
Further, at step 460, a data model may be learnt from training data set 520 by applying suitable data model learning techniques. For example, PCA may be applied to training data set 520 to determine a sufficient number N of its principal components or eigenvectors. For face image data, a sufficient number of eigenvectors N may, for example, be about 10 or 20. The set of N eigenvectors (E1, . . . , E10, . . . ) may be stored or provided to both data encoder 560 and data receiver/reconstruction unit 570 in system 500 for future use. For convenience, the low dimensional subspace of data values spanned by training data set 520 may be referred to hereinafter interchangeably as “the eigenspace” or “the model eigenspace”.
The later steps 470-495 of process 400 utilize the previously determined set of N eigenvectors (E) and the optimal matrices Ai (min) for compressing input data sets and to reconstruct compressed/transmitted data sets.
At step 470, input data sets (e.g., vectors X1, . . . , XT), which are submitted for compression/transmission, are encoded using the set of N eigenvectors (E) as a basis set. The value of an input data vector which has been relocated in to the model eigenspace (e.g., Ai (min) Xi, step 440) is projected on to the basis of N eigenvectors (E) to obtain a set of N eigenvalues or coefficients. This set of N coefficients represents the compressed equivalent of the input data vector.
New input datum (e.g., vector XT+1) that is submitted for compression/transmission, may first be “cleaned up” by invariantly relocating it to a low-dimension linear subspace (e.g., the model eigenspace) in the manner of steps 410-450. A transformation matrix AT+1 that invariantly relocates vector XT+1 to the model eigenspace may be found by reminimizing the full cost function C (A1, . . . , AT+1) by varying all Ai. Optionally, suitable approximations may be used to estimate AT+1. For example, AT+1 be estimated by using previously determined matrices Ai (min) for I=1, to T, and perturbatively minimizing the cost function C (A1,min . . . AT+1) only with respect to AT+1. Alternatively, the new matrix AT+1 can be estimated by maximizing the likelihood under a Gaussian model with the estimated mean and covariance of the transformed training data. Then, invariantly relocated data value AT+1 (min) XT+1 is projected on to the N eigenvectors (E) to obtain a set of N coefficients describing the vector XT+1.
Next at step 480, the set of N coefficients representing an input data vector Xi may be transmitted from a signal transmitter (e.g., transmitter 570) to a receiver (e.g., receiver/reconstruction unit 580). At step 490, the received set of N coefficients and the previously acquired set of N eigenvectors (E1, . . . , E10, . . . . ) are used to reconstruct a version of the input data vector Xi. The reconstructed version corresponds to the representation of the vector Xi in the model eigenspace. Then at optional step 495, the reconstructed image may be displayed as an image or further processed, for example, for recognition.
It will be understood that process 400 as described above can be modified or tailored as desired or necessary for specific applications. For example, for processing vectorized image data it may be desirable to recognize the permutation and correspondence invariance characteristics of images, which are ignored by vector representation of the images (e.g., vector x1 and x2,
In an version of process 400, the affine transformation matrices A used are required to be approximately permutation matrices, by requiring them to be element wise or block wise stochastic matrices. The affine matrices may, for example, be required to be doubly- stochastic, i.e., by imposing the linear constraints ΣiAtij=1, ΣjAtij=1 and Atij≧0, at step 420 of the process. In this approximation, the permutation matrices are “soft,” i.e. not restricted to have entries.
Further, in this version of process 400 in which the affine matrices A are constrained to be doubly-stochastic, a penalty function P(A) may be added to the cost function C(A). The penalty function may be designed to preclude or avoid degenerate solutions for Ai (min) at step 440. The penalty function may, for example, be a quadratic penalty function −λΣimn(Aimn−c)2, where the parameter λ can be adaptively chosen to maintain the convexity of the cost function C(A).
Alternatively, degenerate solutions for Ai (min) may be avoided by using suitable programming algorithms at step 440. Degenerate solutions for Ai (min) may be avoided, for example, by locking a Gaussian mean estimate μ to be one of the raw data vectors (i.e. μ=Xj) and setting its associated transformation matrix Aj, equal to the identity, i.e. Aj=I.
It will be understood that in general any suitable programming techniques may be used to solve for the optimal matrices Ai (min) at step 440. For example, an axis-parallel optimization technique may be used to iteratively minimize the cost function C (A) that effectively is a constrained trace of a covariance.
where S=Cov (AX) and M=So−1 is a gradient upper bound on an initial value of S that is computed variationally.
In this programming technique, only one A, matrix corresponding to one datum (the tth one) is varied in an iterative cycle. Further, only four scalar entries (Atmn, Atmq, Atpn, Atpq) of the At matrix are updated in an iterative cycle, while all other entries are locked. The double-stochastic requirement on the matrices relate the four scalar entries by the equality constraints: Atmn+Atmq=a, Atpn+Atpq=b, Atmn+Atpn=c and Atmq+Atpq=d. Thus, it is necessary to only compute one the four scalars (e.g., Atmn) in the iteration cycle. Further, scalar Atmn also may be limited to satisfy the inequalities Atmn ε[max(0,a−d,c−1), min (a, c,1+a−d)]. After computing Atmn, the values of the other three entries can be obtained using the equality constraints. In this technique, different scalar and different matrices may be randomly updated in each iterative cycle. Further, upper bound (M) may be advantageously recomputed intermittently to obtain monotonic convergence to a global minimum of C(A).
It will be understood that the invariance learning or analysis using process 400 is not limited to image data that is represented by 3-tuples (X, Y, I). Other representations of image data may be similarly analyzed. For example, point-image data represented by (X, y) 2-tuples, or color video image data represented by (X, Y, R, G, B, time) 6-tuples may be analyzed. Further, any data type that can be represented as a collection of tuples may be similarly analyzed. The types of data represented by a collection of tuples include, for example, audio spectrograms that are represented by (amplitude, frequency) 2-tuples, and sequence data that are represented by (value, time) tuples.
In this demonstrative example, joint invariance learning and model learning was performed using process 400 on a set of (X, Y) point images of digits. The digits 3 and 9 were represented as a collection of 70 (X, Y) pixels by sampling regions of high intensity in 28×28 gray scale images of the digits 3 and 9 (See e.g.,
In another demonstrative example, T=300 gray scale images of faces were obtained. The face images were of a single individual's face under various lighting, 3D pose and expression configurations. (See e.g.,
For comparison, conventional PCA and image reconstruction with a similar number of eigenvectors also was performed directly on the original point images without permutation invariance and model learning. These conventionally reconstructed images are shown in
Comparison of the images shown in FIGS. 9(a)-(c) indicates that the reconstructed images have higher fidelity when permutation or correspondence is optimized. The permuted (X, Y, I) eigenvectors unlike the conventional PCA eigenvectors act smoothly, rotating and morphing the face images in three dimensions as well as following changes in illumination.
In this third demonstrative example, several thousand audio spectrograms of 200 frequency bands were collected. The audio spectrograph for each of the 200 frequency bands was represented as 2-tuples of amplitude and frequency. This large raw data set was processed with permutational invariance learning in the manner similar to that described in example 2. The data set was described by 20 significant eigenvectors (step 460
As in the previous examples, the data was also analyzed using conventional PCA without learning permutation invariance.
FIGS. 11(a) and 11(b), respectively, show plots of the squared reconstruction error for audio spectrographs taken from a close-talking microphone and from a wide area microphone. Both figures show the reconstruction errors obtained for PCA under the convex invariance framework, and for comparison that obtained for conventional PCA.
Software or computer programs used for processing data may be written in any suitable programming language. The computer programs may be provided on any computer readable medium or over computer networks. Exemplary computer programs for minimizing the cost function C(A) that are written in the C++ programming language are included in U.S. provisional application No. 60/436,597 included by reference herein.
Now reference is made to exemplary mathematical derivations of the convex Gaussian estimators that were earlier defined as either as a Gaussian mean estimator, C(A)=trace(Cov(AX)), or a Gaussian covariance estimator C(A)=|Cov(AX)|, for jointly performing model estimation while learning invariances at steps 420-430 of process 400. The first case corresponds to estimating a Gaussian mean μ with maximum likelihood assuming a fixed covariance for a Gaussian (normal) distribution N of A and X. Maximizing log-likelihood l(A, μ)=Σt log N(At Xt;μ,I) over the model gives the usual estimate for the mean, {circumflex over (μ)}=1TΣtAtXt. Reinserting this mean estimate into the log-likelihood gives:
This log-likelihood can be converted via negation into an equivalent cost function over the At matrices that is expressed as the trace of the covariance of the data:
C(A)=trace(Cov(AX))
This trace of the covariance is a convex quadratic function of the affine matrices A. Combined with linear constraints, this Gaussian mean estimator is directly solvable via a polynomial time quadratic program (e.g., at step 450 of process 400). This maximum likelihood criterion selects affine matrices that cluster data spherically, centering it towards a common mean.
The second Gaussian estimator case corresponds to more general Gaussian distributions with variable covariance, N(AX; μ, Σ). An imputed maximum likelihood covariance estimates Σ=1/T Σt(AtXt−{circumflex over (μ)})(AxXt−{circumflex over (μ)})T leads to the following expression for log-likelihood:
After simplifications, the maximum likelihood setting of A is given by the equivalent cost function expressed as a determinant of a covariance:
C(A)=|COV(AX)|
Minimizing C(A) according to this Gaussian criterion attempts to cluster data ellipsoidally such that it forms a low-dimensional subspace. It is well known that the determinant of a covariance matrix behaves like a volumetric estimator and approximates the volume of the data. Minimizing volume (e.g., step 440 process 400) is a valuable preprocessing step for PCA modeling since it concentrates signal energy into a smaller number of eigenvalues, improving the effectiveness and reconstruction accuracy in the PCA subspace (the model eigenspace). Solvable programs for minimizing C(A) can be set up because the determinant of a covariance is a convex function of the data A proof of which is as follows:
Proof Convexity holds trivially for 1-dimensional data since |Cov(X)| is merely a positive quadratic. It also holds for higher dimensional diagonal Cov(X) by factorization of the determinant. Rotational invariance of the determinant generalizes the result to arbitrary covariance. Alternatively, Hessian positivity can be verified by taking derivatives. Since the determinant of a covariance matrix is convex in the data, it is also convex in linear or affine matrices on the data. Therefore, C(A) is again convex and Equation 1 results in a convex program. However, Equation 1 may not be solvable through quadratic programming alone. In such cases a solvable program may, however, be obtained by minimizing log C(A) subject to upper bounding using a quadratic function in A. One such solvable program involves sequentially solving multiple quadratic programs interleaved with variational bounding steps until convergence to a global minimum solution is obtained.
An useful upper bound function on the C(A) for this purpose is the logarithm of the determinant of the covariance i.e. C(A)=log |S|, where S=Cov(AX). The logarithm of the determinant S is concave over covariance matrices A. A proof of which may be obtained by verifying negativity of the Hessian derivative as described in D. Jakobson and I. Rivin, “External metrics on graphs,” Forum Math, 14(1) 2002. Since log|S| is concave, it may be upper bounded by a tangential linear function in S that is equal and has the same gradient M=S0−1 at the current setting of S=S0. The upper bound is then: log|S|≦trace(MS)+log|S0|−trace (MS0). It will be understood that rank deficiencies during matrix inversion can be avoided by adding a small reglilarizer.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with specific exemplary embodiments, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions, and alterations can be made to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, alternative methods or programs may be used instead of explicit quadratic programming techniques to compute the optimal transformation matrices At that minimize the cost function C(A). The alternative methods may be motivated, for example, by a desire for faster implementation of the bag of pixels and covariance learning method. Iterative algorithms advantageously may, for example, be used for computing a variational upper bound on the Gaussian covariance estimator cost function C(A).
In one such iterative technique for minimizing C(A) subject to an upper bound, instead of maximizing the full expression of the Gaussian covariance estimator cost function C(A):
a simpler version of C(A) is utilized. In this version, each At is estimated individually to align the current iterative point with the current Gaussian parameters locked:
where At is an ND×ND version of At which is N×N, and where the mean μ and the point {right arrow over (x)}t are vectors of length ND (e.g., like a vectorized version of the matrix Xt).
An upper bound on this version of C(A) is obtained by noting the maximum eigenvalue of M is given by the scalar λ, according to the inequality:
½(at{right arrow over (x)}t−μ)TM(At{right arrow over (x)}t−μ)≦½λ(At{right arrow over (x)}t−{right arrow over (y)}t)T(At{right arrow over (x)}t−{right arrow over (y)}t),
where yt is introduced as a new vector variable that is readily computed from the current setting of the variables on the left hand side using a formula defined below.
To derive the formula for yt it is useful to note that the curvature of the right hand side of this inequality is always greater than the curvature of the left hand side, since M≦λI in the Loewner ordering sense. Further to apply this bound iteratively, the bound should make tangential contact at the old or previous iteration value Ãt. To establish the tangential contact, derivatives of both sides of the inequality with respect to At are set equal to each other to ensure equality at the previous value Ãt:
M(Ãt{right arrow over (x)}t−μ){right arrow over (x)}
which can be solved for {right arrow over (y)}t as follows:
{right arrow over (y)}t=Ãt{right arrow over (x)}t 1/λM(Ãt{right arrow over (x)}t−μ).
The vector {right arrow over (y)}t, which is a long ND vector, can be converted in to a N×D matrix Yt as vec (Yt)={right arrow over (y)}t. The upper bound on the cost function C(A) may then be described in terms of the Frobenius norm as follows:
C(At)≦λ∥AtXt−Yt∥F=λ½tr((AtXt−Yt)(AtXt−Yt)T).
This upper bound expression involves the value of Ãt only as a product with Xt. Accordingly, it is necessary to explicitly store only the vector Ãt{right arrow over (x)}t and not the previous Ãt during iterations. This feature beneficially reduces the computer memory or storage used in the computations.
An iterative solution for At (which minimizes the cost function of Equation 2) can be obtained by viewing the above equations as a “matching” problem and by restricting At to be doubly-stochastic. An exemplary iterative algorithm that may be used involves performing Sinkhorn updates by initializing the solution matrix as follows:
At(i, j)=exp (−½⊕∥{right arrow over (X)}j−{right arrow over (Y)}i∥2),
or using the matrix formula:
Dt={right arrow over (1)}diag(XtXtT)T−2YtXtT+diag(YtYtT){right arrow over (1)}T,
from which At can then obtained element-wise by taking exponents as follows:
At=exp(−½⊕Dt)
During the iterations, the rows and columns of At are repeatedly normalized until At is doubly stochastic. In practice, about five normalization iterations are usually found to be sufficient. During the iterations toward convergence, the scalar β is annealed from an initial value to higher values. Large values of β encourage the At matrix to go from being merely doubly stochastic to being more like a hard permutation matrix. This exemplary algorithm is similar to the previously mentioned Invisible Hand algorithm, which also keeps track of the At entries and the row and column normalizers in logarithmic space for efficiency.
An alternative algorithmic method for minimizing the cost function of Equation 2, which explicitly returns a permutation matrix, is based on the conventional Kuhn-Munkres algorithm from graph theory. In this method the solution for At is obtained by feeding the Kuhn-Munkres algorithm as follows At=KuhnMunkres(−Dt). The Kuhn Munkres algorithm provides an integer solution. Thus it may be necessary to artificially decrease the value of λ to avoid local minimum solutions while iterating toward the global minimum in C(A).
The Kuhn-Munkres algorithm, which solves the known linear assignment problem in graph theory, also may be used to directly minimize the cost function C(A) defined in Equation 2. When the covariance is spherical (i.e. when M=αI) the expression for the cost function C(A) can be trivially reduced to:
C(A)=constant−2 ΣiΣiAijWij, where Wij=ΣdYidXjd.
Thus, minimizing C(A) is equivalent to maximizing the linear assignment problem LAP (A), where
However, in general the covariance is not spherical (i.e. M≢αI) and minimizing {tilde over (C)}(At) poses a type of a quadratic assignment problem (QAP):
{tilde over (C)}(A)=½(A{right arrow over (x)}−μ)T M(A{right arrow over (x)}−μ)=½{right arrow over (x)}TAT M Ax−μT MA{right arrow over (x)}+const
In this case, the Kuhn-Munlue algorithm can be used for minimizing C(A) by advantageously formulating the variational upper bound on C(A) so as to map the problem of the minimization of C(A) to a linear assignment problem (referred to herein as the “QAP bound”).
The QAP bound on C(A) can be formulated as a linear assignment problem by approximating the inverse covariance matrix Min terms of K of its N eigenvalues λ and eigenvectors v as follows:
In this approximation the non-constant terms of C(A) are written as:
The first term of the expression is a quadratic and therefore is a convex function. Jensen's inequality for convex functions (i.e. f(Ex)<E(f(x)) can be exploited to define the QAP bound using the convex properties of the quadratic term. First, a K×N matrix Q having all non-negative entries is defined such that ΣQki=1, i=1 . . . N. Then, the matrix Q is introduced in quadratic first term in a manner that allows application of Jensen's inequality to define the QAP bound:
For permutation matrices A that are used for invariance learning (e.g., in process 400), Q also satisfies the following relationship:
Thus the the QAP bound can be further simplified as a linear assignment problem, which is readily solvable using the Kuhn Munkres algorithm:
The QAP bound is a function of Q. In a program to minimize C(A) iteratively over A using Kuhn-Munkres operations, the QAP bound is minimized over Q. On defining
the problem of minimizing the QAP bound reduces to minimizations of the form:
It is sufficient to carry out the minimization over Q for a single k value as the minimizations over Q for different k values are decoupled. Using Lagrange's method of undetermined multipliers for minimization over Q leads to the following expression for Q:
Using this expression, the QAP upper bound on {tilde over (C)}(A) may be written in terms of the old or previous iteration values of the A matrix, Ã as follows:
This expression presents the minimization of the QAP upper bound as linear assignment problem. The Kuhn Munkres algorithm or other faster heuristic algorithms such as QuickMatch by Orlin, may be used for iteration. In the iterative algorithms, the terms in the square bracket are used to weigh the entries of the A-matrix.
Appendix A and B list exemplary MATLAB source code that may be used implement the Kuhn-Munkres algorithms.
Another iterative optimization scheme, which may be to compute the optimal transformation matrices At that minimize the cost function C(A) of Equation 2 is based on singular value decomposition (SVD) methods. For an SVD-based optimization scheme, the matrix A is defined as the element-wise square of a rotation or orthonormal matrix B: A=B.*B. Thus, A is a doubly-stochastic matrix. An iterative solution for matrix B is obtained using SVD. B is then squared to update the current estimate of a At matrix in the cost function.
For the SVD-based optimization scheme, an upper bound on C(A) may be formulated as a Procrustes problem on the matrix B. In this “Proscrustes approach,” the Frobenius norm upper bound on C(At)is written as:
½λtr((AX−Y)(AX−Y)T)≦½ω∥BR−S∥2+c,
where the matrices R and S and the scalar c are Procrustes parameters that are required to satisfy the upper bound inequality.
Further, a small penalty may be added to the left-hand term to encourage the doubly-stochastic matrices At to be hard or permutation-like:
Larger values of β encourage more permutation-like behavior.
Recalling that each entry of A is Aij=Bij2 the upper bound constraint on C(A) may be written in terms of the scalar entries of all matrices in a form suitable for SVD analysis as:
Solving the Procrustes problem for the optimum matrix B is done via a singular value decomposition [U, S, V]=svd (RST) and then reassembling the matrix as B=UVT
It will be understood that the foregoing descriptions of specific numerical methods to solve for the optimal matrices Ai (min) are only illustrative and not limiting on the computational methods used for joint invariance and model learning. In some instances, kernel methods may be conveniently or effectively used. For example, it is straightforward to kernelize a Gaussian mean estimator cost function so that all subsequent calculations and inner products can be done in Hilbert space.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 60/436,597 filed Dec. 26, 2002, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60436597 | Dec 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US03/41399 | Dec 2003 | US |
Child | 11132078 | May 2005 | US |