NOODLE: Joint Cross-View Discrepancy Discovery and High-Order Correlation Detection for Multi-View Subspace Clustering
Zhibin Gu, Songhe Feng, Zhendong Li, Jiazheng Yuan, Jun Liu- General Computer Science
Benefiting from the effective exploration of the valuable topological pair-wise relationship of data points across multiple views, multi-view subspace clustering (MVSC) has received increasing attention in recent years. However, we observe that existing MVSC approaches still suffer from two limitations that need to be further improved to enhance the clustering effectiveness. Firstly, previous MVSC approaches mainly prioritize extracting multi-view consistency, often neglecting the cross-view discrepancy that may arise from noise, outliers, and view-inherent properties. Secondly, existing techniques are constrained by their reliance on pair-wise sample correlation and pair-wise view correlation, failing to capture the high-order correlations that are enclosed within multiple views. To address these issues, we propose a novel MVSC framework via joi N t cr O ss-view discrepancy disc O very an D high-order corre L ation d E tection ( NOODLE ), seeking an informative target subspace representation compatible across multiple features to facilitate the downstream clustering task. Specifically, we first exploit the self-representation mechanism to learn multiple view-specific affinity matrices, which are further decomposed into cohesive factors and incongruous factors to fit the multi-view consistency and discrepancy, respectively. Additionally, an explicit cross-view sparse regularization is applied to incoherent parts, ensuring the consistency and discrepancy to be precisely separated from the initial subspace representations. Meanwhile, the multiple cohesive parts are stacked into a three-dimensional tensor associated with a tensor-Singular Value Decomposition (t-SVD) based weighted tensor nuclear norm constraint, enabling effective detection of the high-order correlations implicit in multi-view data. Our proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art methods for multi-view clustering on six benchmark datasets, demonstrating its effectiveness.