ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Spatiotemporal gene expression data of the human brain offer insights on the spa- tial and temporal patterns of gene regulation during brain development. Most existing methods for analyzing these data consider spatial and temporal profiles separately with the implicit assumption that different brain regions develop in similar trajectories, and that the spatial patterns of gene expression remain similar at different time points. Al- though these analyses may help delineate gene regulation either spatially or temporally, they are not able to characterize heterogeneity in temporal dynamics across different brain regions, or the evolution of spatial patterns of gene regulation over time. In this article, we develop a statistical method based on low rank tensor decomposition to more effectively analyze spatiotemporal gene expression data. We generalize the clas- sical principal component analysis (PCA) which is applicable only to data matrices, to tensor PCA that can simultaneously capture spatial and temporal effects. We also propose an efficient algorithm that combines tensor unfolding and power iteration to estimate the tensor principal components, and provide guarantees on their statistical performances. Numerical experiments are presented to further demonstrate the mer- its of the proposed method. An application of our method to a spatiotemporal brain expression data provides insights on gene regulation patterns in the brain.
We consider the problem of estimating high-dimensional covariance matrices of a particular structure, which is a summation of low rank and sparse matrices. This covariance structure has a wide range of applications including factor analysis and rando
Spatiotemporal traffic time series (e.g., traffic volume/speed) collected from sensing systems are often incomplete with considerable corruption and large amounts of missing values, preventing users from harnessing the full power of the data. Missing
Missing value problem in spatiotemporal traffic data has long been a challenging topic, in particular for large-scale and high-dimensional data with complex missing mechanisms and diverse degrees of missingness. Recent studies based on tensor nuclear
This paper is concerned with the Tucker decomposition based low rank tensor completion problem, which is about reconstructing a tensor $mathcal{T}inmathbb{R}^{ntimes ntimes n}$ of a small multilinear rank from partially observed entries. We study the
Low-rank tensor decomposition generalizes low-rank matrix approximation and is a powerful technique for discovering low-dimensional structure in high-dimensional data. In this paper, we study Tucker decompositions and use tools from randomized numeri