The hierarchical SVD provides a quasi-best low rank approximation of high dimensional data in the hierarchical Tucker framework. Similar to the SVD for matrices, it provides a fundamental but expensive tool for tensor computations. In the present work we examine generalizations of randomized matrix decomposition methods to higher order tensors in the framework of the hierarchical tensors representation. In particular we present and analyze a randomized algorithm for the calculation of the hierarchical SVD (HSVD) for the tensor train (TT) format.
An algorithm of the tensor renormalization group is proposed based on a randomized algorithm for singular value decomposition. Our algorithm is applicable to a broad range of two-dimensional classical models. In the case of a square lattice, its computational complexity and memory usage are proportional to the fifth and the third power of the bond dimension, respectively, whereas those of the conventional implementation are of the sixth and the fourth power. The oversampling parameter larger than the bond dimension is sufficient to reproduce the same result as full singular value decomposition even at the critical point of the two-dimensional Ising model.
Quaternion matrix approximation problems construct the approximated matrix via the quaternion singular value decomposition (SVD) by selecting some singular value decomposition (SVD) triplets of quaternion matrices. In applications such as color image processing and recognition problems, only a small number of dominant SVD triplets are selected, while in some applications such as quaternion total least squares problem, small SVD triplets (small singular values and associated singular vectors) and numerical rank with respect to a small threshold are required. In this paper, we propose a randomized quaternion SVD (verbrandsvdQ) method to compute a small number of SVD triplets of a large-scale quaternion matrix. Theoretical results are given about approximation errors and the corresponding algorithm adapts to the low-rank matrix approximation problem. When the restricted rank increases, it might lead to information loss of small SVD triplets. The blocked quaternion randomized SVD algorithm is then developed when the numerical rank and information about small singular values are required. For color face recognition problems, numerical results show good performance of the developed quaternion randomized SVD method for low-rank approximation of a large-scale quaternion matrix. The blocked randomized SVD algorithm is also shown to be more robust than unblocked method through several experiments, and approximation errors from the blocked scheme are very close to the optimal error obtained by truncating a full SVD.
The accurate approximation of high-dimensional functions is an essential task in uncertainty quantification and many other fields. We propose a new function approximation scheme based on a spectral extension of the tensor-train (TT) decomposition. We first define a functional version of the TT decomposition and analyze its properties. We obtain results on the convergence of the decomposition, revealing links between the regularity of the function, the dimension of the input space, and the TT ranks. We also show that the regularity of the target function is preserved by the univariate functions (i.e., the cores) comprising the functional TT decomposition. This result motivates an approximation scheme employing polynomial approximations of the cores. For functions with appropriate regularity, the resulting textit{spectral tensor-train decomposition} combines the favorable dimension-scaling of the TT decomposition with the spectral convergence rate of polynomial approximations, yielding efficient and accurate surrogates for high-dimensional functions. To construct these decompositions, we use the sampling algorithm texttt{TT-DMRG-cross} to obtain the TT decomposition of tensors resulting from suitable discretizations of the target function. We assess the performance of the method on a range of numerical examples: a modifed set of Genz functions with dimension up to $100$, and functions with mixed Fourier modes or with local features. We observe significant improvements in performance over an anisotropic adaptive Smolyak approach. The method is also used to approximate the solution of an elliptic PDE with random input data. The open source software and examples presented in this work are available online.
This paper introduces the functional tensor singular value decomposition (FTSVD), a novel dimension reduction framework for tensors with one functional mode and several tabular modes. The problem is motivated by high-order longitudinal data analysis. Our model assumes the observed data to be a random realization of an approximate CP low-rank functional tensor measured on a discrete time grid. Incorporating tensor algebra and the theory of Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Space (RKHS), we propose a novel RKHS-based constrained power iteration with spectral initialization. Our method can successfully estimate both singular vectors and functions of the low-rank structure in the observed data. With mild assumptions, we establish the non-asymptotic contractive error bounds for the proposed algorithm. The superiority of the proposed framework is demonstrated via extensive experiments on both simulated and real data.
We introduce PyParSVDfootnote{https://github.com/Romit-Maulik/PyParSVD}, a Python library that implements a streaming, distributed and randomized algorithm for the singular value decomposition. To demonstrate its effectiveness, we extract coherent structures from scientific data. Futhermore, we show weak scaling assessments on up to 256 nodes of the Theta machine at Argonne Leadership Computing Facility, demonstrating potential for large-scale data analyses of practical data sets.