Abstract

Graph-based clustering approaches, especially the family of spectral clustering, have been widely used in machine learning areas. The alternatives usually engage a similarity matrix that is constructed in advance or learned from a probabilistic perspective. However, unreasonable similarity matrix construction inevitably leads to performance degradation, and the sum-to-one probability constraints may make the approaches sensitive to noisy scenarios. To address these issues, the notion of typicality-aware adaptive similarity matrix learning is presented in this study. The typicality (possibility) rather than the probability of each sample being a neighbor of other samples is measured and adaptively learned. By introducing a robust balance term, the similarity between any pairs of samples is only related to the distance between them, yet it is not affected by other samples. Therefore, the impact caused by the noisy data or outliers can be alleviated, and meanwhile, the neighborhood structures can be well captured according to the joint distance between samples and their spectral embeddings. Moreover, the generated similarity matrix has block diagonal properties that are beneficial to correct clustering. Interestingly, the results optimized by the typicality-aware adaptive similarity matrix learning share the common essence with the Gaussian kernel function, and the latter can be directly derived from the former. Extensive experiments on synthetic and well-known benchmark datasets demonstrate the superiority of the proposed idea when comparing with some state-of-the-art methods.

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