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Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive greedy approximations

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TLDR
A notion of the coherence of a signal with respect to a dictionary is derived from the characterization of the approximation errors of a pursuit from their statistical properties, which can be obtained from the invariant measure of the pursuit.
Abstract
The problem of optimally approximating a function with a linear expansion over a redundant dictionary of waveforms is NP-hard. The greedy matching pursuit algorithm and its orthogonalized variant produce suboptimal function expansions by iteratively choosing dictionary waveforms that best match the function’s structures. A matching pursuit provides a means of quickly computing compact, adaptive function approximations. Numerical experiments show that the approximation errors from matching pursuits initially decrease rapidly, but the asymptotic decay rate of the errors is slow. We explain this behavior by showing that matching pursuits are chaotic, ergodic maps. The statistical properties of the approximation errors of a pursuit can be obtained from the invariant measure of the pursuit. We characterize these measures using group symmetries of dictionaries and by constructing a stochastic differential equation model. We derive a notion of the coherence of a signal with respect to a dictionary from our characterization of the approximation errors of a pursuit. The dictionary elements slected during the initial iterations of a pursuit correspond to a function’s coherent structures. The tail of the expansion, on the other hand, corresponds to a noise which is characterized by the invariant measure of the pursuit map. When using a suitable dictionary, the expansion of a function into its coherent structures yields a compact approximation. We demonstrate a denoising algorithm based on coherent function expansions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

$rm K$ -SVD: An Algorithm for Designing Overcomplete Dictionaries for Sparse Representation

TL;DR: A novel algorithm for adapting dictionaries in order to achieve sparse signal representations, the K-SVD algorithm, an iterative method that alternates between sparse coding of the examples based on the current dictionary and a process of updating the dictionary atoms to better fit the data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signal Recovery From Random Measurements Via Orthogonal Matching Pursuit

TL;DR: It is demonstrated theoretically and empirically that a greedy algorithm called orthogonal matching pursuit (OMP) can reliably recover a signal with m nonzero entries in dimension d given O(m ln d) random linear measurements of that signal.

Signal Recovery from Random Measurements Via Orthogonal Matching Pursuit: The Gaussian Case

TL;DR: In this paper, a greedy algorithm called Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (OMP) was proposed to recover a signal with m nonzero entries in dimension 1 given O(m n d) random linear measurements of that signal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Greed is good: algorithmic results for sparse approximation

TL;DR: This article presents new results on using a greedy algorithm, orthogonal matching pursuit (OMP), to solve the sparse approximation problem over redundant dictionaries and develops a sufficient condition under which OMP can identify atoms from an optimal approximation of a nonsparse signal.
Book

Understanding Machine Learning: From Theory To Algorithms

TL;DR: The aim of this textbook is to introduce machine learning, and the algorithmic paradigms it offers, in a principled way in an advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate course.
References
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Book

Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness

TL;DR: The second edition of a quarterly column as discussed by the authors provides a continuing update to the list of problems (NP-complete and harder) presented by M. R. Garey and myself in our book "Computers and Intractability: A Guide to the Theory of NP-Completeness,” W. H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco, 1979.
Book

Introduction to Algorithms

TL;DR: The updated new edition of the classic Introduction to Algorithms is intended primarily for use in undergraduate or graduate courses in algorithms or data structures and presents a rich variety of algorithms and covers them in considerable depth while making their design and analysis accessible to all levels of readers.
Book

Ten lectures on wavelets

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analyses of the wavelet transforms of Coxeter’s inequality and its applications to multiresolutional analysis and orthonormal bases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ten Lectures on Wavelets

TL;DR: In this article, the regularity of compactly supported wavelets and symmetry of wavelet bases are discussed. But the authors focus on the orthonormal bases of wavelets, rather than the continuous wavelet transform.
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