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  2. Spectral clustering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_clustering

    The general approach to spectral clustering is to use a standard clustering method (there are many such methods, k-means is discussed below) on relevant eigenvectors of a Laplacian matrix of . There are many different ways to define a Laplacian which have different mathematical interpretations, and so the clustering will also have different ...

  3. Cluster analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluster_analysis

    Cluster analysis or clustering is the task of grouping a set of objects in such a way that objects in the same group (called a cluster) are more similar (in some specific sense defined by the analyst) to each other than to those in other groups (clusters).

  4. Multispectral pattern recognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multispectral_pattern...

    Unsupervised classification (also known as clustering) is a method of partitioning remote sensor image data in multispectral feature space and extracting land-cover information. Unsupervised classification require less input information from the analyst compared to supervised classification because clustering does not require training data.

  5. DBSCAN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DBSCAN

    A spectral implementation of DBSCAN is related to spectral clustering in the trivial case of determining connected graph components — the optimal clusters with no edges cut. [12] However, it can be computationally intensive, up to (). Additionally, one has to choose the number of eigenvectors to compute.

  6. Graph partition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_partition

    Global approaches rely on properties of the entire graph and do not rely on an arbitrary initial partition. The most common example is spectral partitioning, where a partition is derived from approximate eigenvectors of the adjacency matrix, or spectral clustering that groups graph vertices using the eigendecomposition of the graph Laplacian ...

  7. Kernel method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kernel_method

    Kernel methods owe their name to the use of kernel functions, which enable them to operate in a high-dimensional, implicit feature space without ever computing the coordinates of the data in that space, but rather by simply computing the inner products between the images of all pairs of data in the feature space. This operation is often ...

  8. Spectral graph theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_graph_theory

    Spectral graph theory emerged in the 1950s and 1960s. Besides graph theoretic research on the relationship between structural and spectral properties of graphs, another major source was research in quantum chemistry , but the connections between these two lines of work were not discovered until much later. [ 15 ]

  9. Biclustering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biclustering

    Biclustering, block clustering, [1] [2] Co-clustering or two-mode clustering [3] [4] [5] is a data mining technique which allows simultaneous clustering of the rows and columns of a matrix. The term was first introduced by Boris Mirkin [ 6 ] to name a technique introduced many years earlier, [ 6 ] in 1972, by John A. Hartigan .