4.8 Article

Multiple Kernel k-Means with Incomplete Kernels

Journal

Publisher

IEEE COMPUTER SOC
DOI: 10.1109/TPAMI.2019.2892416

Keywords

Kernel; Clustering algorithms; Optimization; Pattern analysis; Information technology; Prediction algorithms; Multiple kernel clustering; multiple view learning; incomplete kernel learning

Funding

  1. National Key RAMP
  2. D Program of China [2018YFB1003203]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of China [61701451, 61672528]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) [KL 2698/2-1, GRK1589/2]
  5. Federal Ministry of Science and Education (BMBF) [031L0023A, 01IS18051A]

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Multiple kernel clustering (MKC) algorithms optimally combine a group of pre-specified base kernel matrices to improve clustering performance. However, existing MKC algorithms cannot efficiently address the situation where some rows and columns of base kernel matrices are absent. This paper proposes two simple yet effective algorithms to address this issue. Different from existing approaches where incomplete kernel matrices are first imputed and a standard MKC algorithm is applied to the imputed kernel matrices, our first algorithm integrates imputation and clustering into a unified learning procedure. Specifically, we perform multiple kernel clustering directly with the presence of incomplete kernel matrices, which are treated as auxiliary variables to be jointly optimized. Our algorithm does not require that there be at least one complete base kernel matrix over all the samples. Also, it adaptively imputes incomplete kernel matrices and combines them to best serve clustering. Moreover, we further improve this algorithm by encouraging these incomplete kernel matrices to mutually complete each other. The three-step iterative algorithm is designed to solve the resultant optimization problems. After that, we theoretically study the generalization bound of the proposed algorithms. Extensive experiments are conducted on 13 benchmark data sets to compare the proposed algorithms with existing imputation-based methods. Our algorithms consistently achieve superior performance and the improvement becomes more significant with increasing missing ratio, verifying the effectiveness and advantages of the proposed joint imputation and clustering.

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