4.7 Article

Low Rank Representation on SPD matrices with Log-Euclidean metric

Journal

PATTERN RECOGNITION
Volume 76, Issue -, Pages 623-634

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.patcog.2017.07.009

Keywords

Symmetrical positive definite matrices; Log-Euclidean metric; Low Rank Representation; Subspace clustering

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP140102270]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61390510, 61672071, 61632006, 61370119]
  3. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [4172003, 4162010, 4152009]
  4. Funding Project for Academic Human Resources Development in Institutions of Higher Learning Under the Jurisdiction of Beijing Municipality [IDHT20150504]

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Symmetric Positive semi-Definite (SPD) matrices, as a kind of effective feature descriptors, have been widely used in pattern recognition and computer vision tasks. Affine-invariant metric (AIM) is a popular way to measure the distance between SPD matrices, but it imposes a high computational burden in practice. Compared with AIM, the Log-Euclidean metric embeds the SPD manifold via the matrix logarithm into a Euclidean space in which only classical Euclidean computation is involved. The advantage of using this metric for the non-linear SPD matrices representation of data has been recognized in some domains such as compressed sensing, however one pays little attention to this metric in data clustering. In this paper, we propose a novel Low Rank Representation (LRR) model on SPD matrices space with Log-Euclidean metric (LogELRR), which enables us to handle non-linear data through a linear manipulation manner. To further explore the intrinsic geometry distance between SPD matrices, we embed the SPD matrices into Reproductive Kernel Hilbert Space (RKHS) to form a family of kernels on SPD matrices based on the Log-Euclidean metric and construct a novel kernelized LogELRR method. The clustering results on a wide range of datasets, including object images, facial images, 3D objects, texture images and medical images, show that our proposed methods overcome other conventional clustering methods. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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