Abstract

Correlation learning is a technique utilized to find a common representation in cross-domain and multiview datasets. However, most existing methods are not robust enough to handle noisy data. As such, the common representation matrix learned could be influenced easily by noisy samples inherent in different instances of the data. In this paper, we propose a novel correlation learning method based on a low-rank representation, which learns a common representation between two instances of data in a latent subspace. Specifically, we begin by learning a low-rank representation matrix and an orthogonal rotation matrix to handle the noisy samples in one instance of the data so that a second instance of the data can linearly reconstruct the low-rank representation. Our method then finds a similarity matrix that approximates the common low-rank representation matrix much better such that a rank constraint on the Laplacian matrix would reveal the clustering structure explicitly without any spectral postprocessing. Extensive experimental results on ORL, Yale, Coil-20, Caltech 101-20, and UCI digits datasets demonstrate that our method has superior performance than other state-of-the-art compared methods in six evaluation metrics.

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