FINITE SAMPLE APPROXIMATION RESULTS FOR PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS: A MATRIX PERTURBATION APPROACH 论文

2008引用 300
Random Matrices and ApplicationsBayesian Methods and Mixture ModelsBlind Source Separation Techniques

摘要

Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is a standard tool for dimensional reduction of a set of n observations (samples), each with p variables. In this paper, using a matrix perturbation approach, we study the non-asymptotic relation between the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of PCA computed on a finite sample of size n, to those of the limiting population PCA as n → ∞. As in machine learning, we present a finite sample theorem which holds with high probability for the closeness between the leading eigenvalue and eigenvector of sample PCA and population PCA under a spiked covariance model. In addition, we also consider the relation between finite sample PCA and the asymptotic results in the joint limit p, n → ∞, with p/n = c. We present a matrix perturbation view of the “phase transition phenomenon”, and a simple linear-algebra based derivation of the eigenvalue and eigenvector overlap in this asymptotic limit. Moreover, our analysis also applies for finite p, n where we show that although there is no sharp phase transition as in the infinite case, either as a function of noise level or as a function of sample size n, the eigenvector of sample PCA may exhibit a sharp ”loss of tracking”, suddenly losing its relation to the (true) eigenvector of the population PCA matrix. This occurs due to a crossover between the eigenvalue due to the signal and the largest eigenvalue due to noise, whose eigenvector points in a random direction.

作者

暂无数据

相关事件

暂无数据

相关文章

暂无数据