In many fields of computer science, tensor decomposition techniques are increasingly being adopted as the core of many applications that rely on multi-dimensional datasets for implementing knowledge discovery tasks. Unfortunately, a major shortcoming of state-of-the-art tensor analyses is that, despite their effectiveness when the data is certain, these operations become difficult to apply, or altogether inapplicable, in presence of uncertainty in the data, a circumstance common to many real-world scenarios. In this paper we propose a way to address this issue by extending the known Tensor-Train technique for tensor factorization in order to deal with uncertain data, here modeled as intervals. Working with interval-valued data, however, presents numerous challenges, since many algebraic operations that form the building blocks of the factorization process, as well as the properties that make these procedures useful for knowledge discovery, cannot be easily extended from their scalar counterparts, and often require some approximation (including, though it is not only the case, for keeping computational costs manageable). These challenges notwithstanding, our proposed techniques proved to be reasonably effective, and are supported by a thorough experimental validation.

Tensor-Train Decomposition in Presence of Interval-Valued Data

Di Mauro, Francesco
;
Sapino, Maria Luisa
2023-01-01

Abstract

In many fields of computer science, tensor decomposition techniques are increasingly being adopted as the core of many applications that rely on multi-dimensional datasets for implementing knowledge discovery tasks. Unfortunately, a major shortcoming of state-of-the-art tensor analyses is that, despite their effectiveness when the data is certain, these operations become difficult to apply, or altogether inapplicable, in presence of uncertainty in the data, a circumstance common to many real-world scenarios. In this paper we propose a way to address this issue by extending the known Tensor-Train technique for tensor factorization in order to deal with uncertain data, here modeled as intervals. Working with interval-valued data, however, presents numerous challenges, since many algebraic operations that form the building blocks of the factorization process, as well as the properties that make these procedures useful for knowledge discovery, cannot be easily extended from their scalar counterparts, and often require some approximation (including, though it is not only the case, for keeping computational costs manageable). These challenges notwithstanding, our proposed techniques proved to be reasonably effective, and are supported by a thorough experimental validation.
2023
35
4
4267
4280
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9652076
Di Mauro, Francesco; Candan, K. Selcuk; Sapino, Maria Luisa
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1893691
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