Abstract

Feature selection is a widely used dimension reduction technique to select feature subsets because of its interpretability. Many methods have been proposed and achieved good results, in which the relationships between adjacent data points are mainly concerned. But the possible associations between data pairs that are not adjacent are always neglected. Different from previous methods, we propose a novel and very simple approach for unsupervised feature selection, named MMFS (Multi-step Markov Probability Relationship for Feature Selection). The idea is using multi-step Markov transition probability to describe the relation between any data pair. Two ways from the positive and negative viewpoints are employed respectively to keep the data structure after feature selection. From the positive viewpoint, the maximum transition probability that can be reached in a certain number of steps is used to describe the relation between two points. Then, the features which can keep the compact data structure are selected. From the viewpoint of negative, the minimum transition probability that can be reached in a certain number of steps is used to describe the relation between two points. On the contrary, the features that least maintain the loose data structure are selected. The two ways can also be combined. Thus three algorithms are proposed. Our main contributions are a novel feature section approach which uses multi-step transition probability to characterize the data structure, and three algorithms proposed from the positive and negative aspects for keeping data structure and select the features to preserve such structure. The performance of our approach is compared with the state-of-the-art methods on eight real-world data sets, and the experimental results show that the proposed MMFS is effective in unsupervised feature selection.

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