An adaptive spectral clustering algorithm based on the importance of shared nearest neighbors (Q1736648)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
An adaptive spectral clustering algorithm based on the importance of shared nearest neighbors
scientific article

    Statements

    An adaptive spectral clustering algorithm based on the importance of shared nearest neighbors (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    26 March 2019
    0 references
    Summary: The construction of a similarity matrix is one significant step for the spectral clustering algorithm; while the Gaussian kernel function is one of the most common measures for constructing the similarity matrix. However, with a fixed scaling parameter, the similarity between two data points is not adaptive and appropriate for multi-scale datasets. In this paper, through quantitating the value of the importance for each vertex of the similarity graph, the Gaussian kernel function is scaled, and an adaptive Gaussian kernel similarity measure is proposed. Then, an adaptive spectral clustering algorithm is gotten based on the importance of shared nearest neighbors. The idea is that the greater the importance of the shared neighbors between two vertexes, the more possible it is that these two vertexes belong to the same cluster; and the importance value of the shared neighbors is obtained with an iterative method, which considers both the local structural information and the distance similarity information, so as to improve the algorithm's performance. Experimental results on different datasets show that our spectral clustering algorithm outperforms the other spectral clustering algorithms, such as the self-tuning spectral clustering and the adaptive spectral clustering based on shared nearest neighbors in clustering accuracy on most datasets.
    0 references
    spectral clustering
    0 references
    similarity measures
    0 references
    Gaussian kernel function
    0 references
    importance of nearest neighbors
    0 references

    Identifiers