George Atia

Papers from this author

Scalable Direction-Search-Based Approach to Subspace Clustering

Yicong He, George Atia

Responsive image

Auto-TLDR; Fast Direction-Search-Based Subspace Clustering

Slides Similar

Subspace clustering finds a multi-subspace representation that best fits a high-dimensional dataset. The computational and storage complexities of existing algorithms limit their usefulness for large scale data. In this paper, we develop a novel scalable approach to subspace clustering termed Fast Direction-Search-Based Subspace Clustering (Fast DiSC). In sharp contrast to existing scalable solutions which are mostly based on the self-expressiveness property of the data, Fast DiSC rests upon a new representation obtained from projections on computed data-dependent directions. These directions are derived from a convex formulation for optimal direction search to gauge hidden similarity relations. The computational complexity is significantly reduced by performing direction search in partitions of sampled data, followed by a retrieval step to cluster out-of-sample data using projections on the computed directions. A theoretical analysis underscores the ability of the proposed formulation to construct local similarity relations for the different data points. Experiments on both synthetic and real data demonstrate that the proposed algorithm can often outperform the state-of-the-art clustering methods.

Sketch-Based Community Detection Via Representative Node Sampling

Mahlagha Sedghi, Andre Beckus, George Atia

Responsive image

Auto-TLDR; Sketch-based Clustering of Community Detection Using a Small Sketch

Slides Poster Similar

This paper proposes a sketch-based approach to the community detection problem which clusters the full graph through the use of an informative and concise sketch. The reduced sketch is built through an effective sampling approach which selects few nodes that best represent the complete graph and operates on a pairwise node similarity measure based on the average commute time. After sampling, the proposed algorithm clusters the nodes in the sketch, and then infers the cluster membership of the remaining nodes in the full graph based on their aggregate similarity to nodes in the partitioned sketch. By sampling nodes with strong representation power, our approach can improve the success rates over full graph clustering. In challenging cases with large node degree variation, our approach not only maintains competitive accuracy with full graph clustering despite using a small sketch, but also outperforms existing sampling methods. The use of a small sketch allows considerable storage savings, and computational and timing improvements for further analysis such as clustering and visualization. We provide numerical results on synthetic data based on the homogeneous, heterogeneous and degree corrected versions of the stochastic block model, as well as experimental results on real-world data.