Functional dissipation microarrays for classification
From MaRDI portal
Publication:996417
DOI10.1016/J.PATCOG.2007.03.031zbMATH Open1122.68552arXivphysics/0603002OpenAlexW2002753032MaRDI QIDQ996417FDOQ996417
Authors: J. Martínez
Publication date: 14 September 2007
Published in: Pattern Recognition (Search for Journal in Brave)
Abstract: In this article, we describe a new method of extracting information from signals, called functional dissipation, that proves to be very effective for enhancing classification of high resolution, texture-rich data. Our algorithm bypasses to some extent the need to have very specialized feature extraction techniques, and can potentially be used as an intermediate, feature enhancement step in any classification scheme. Functional dissipation is based on signal transforms, but uses the transforms recursively to uncover new features. We generate a variety of masking functions and `extract' features with several generalized matching pursuit iterations. In each iteration, the recursive process modifies several coefficients of the transformed signal with the largest absolute values according to the specific masking function; in this way the greedy pursuit is turned into a slow, controlled, dissipation of the structure of the signal that, for some masking functions, enhances separation among classes. Our case study in this paper is the classification of crystallization patterns of amino acids solutions affected by the addition of small quantities of proteins.
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0603002
Recommendations
Cites Work
- The elements of statistical learning. Data mining, inference, and prediction
- Greedy function approximation: A gradient boosting machine.
- Bagging predictors
- Additive logistic regression: a statistical view of boosting. (With discussion and a rejoinder by the authors)
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Robust uncertainty principles: exact signal reconstruction from highly incomplete frequency information
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Adaptive greedy approximations
- Dynamical systems that sort lists, diagonalize matrices, and solve linear programming problems
- Kernel matching pursuit
- Title not available (Why is that?)
This page was built for publication: Functional dissipation microarrays for classification
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q996417)