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  2. Moore–Penrose inverse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore–Penrose_inverse

    The ginv function calculates a pseudoinverse using the singular value decomposition provided by the svd function in the base R package. An alternative is to employ the pinv function available in the pracma package. The Octave programming language provides a pseudoinverse through the standard package function pinv and the pseudo_inverse() method.

  3. Invertible matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invertible_matrix

    Matrix inversion is the process of finding the matrix which when multiplied by the original matrix gives the identity matrix. [2] Over a field, a square matrix that is not invertible is called singular or degenerate. A square matrix with entries in a field is singular if and only if its determinant is zero.

  4. Sherman–Morrison formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherman–Morrison_formula

    Sherman–Morrison formula. In linear algebra, the Sherman–Morrison formula, named after Jack Sherman and Winifred J. Morrison, computes the inverse of a " rank -1 update" to a matrix whose inverse has previously been computed. [1][2][3] That is, given an invertible matrix and the outer product of vectors and the formula cheaply computes an ...

  5. List of named matrices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_matrices

    Pseudoinverse — a generalization of the inverse matrix. Row echelon form — a matrix in this form is the result of applying the forward elimination procedure to a matrix (as used in Gaussian elimination). Wronskian — the determinant of a matrix of functions and their derivatives such that row n is the (n−1) th derivative of row one.

  6. Matrix (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_(mathematics)

    Matrix (mathematics) An m × n matrix: the m rows are horizontal and the n columns are vertical. Each element of a matrix is often denoted by a variable with two subscripts. For example, a2,1 represents the element at the second row and first column of the matrix. In mathematics, a matrix (pl.: matrices) is a rectangular array or table of ...

  7. Matrix multiplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_multiplication

    A square matrix may have a multiplicative inverse, called an inverse matrix. In the common case where the entries belong to a commutative ring R, a matrix has an inverse if and only if its determinant has a multiplicative inverse in R. The determinant of a product of square matrices is the product of the determinants of the factors.

  8. Whitening transformation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitening_transformation

    A whitening transformation or sphering transformation is a linear transformation that transforms a vector of random variables with a known covariance matrix into a set of new variables whose covariance is the identity matrix, meaning that they are uncorrelated and each have variance 1. [1] The transformation is called "whitening" because it ...

  9. Inverse-Wishart distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-Wishart_distribution

    Inverse-Wishart. In statistics, the inverse Wishart distribution, also called the inverted Wishart distribution, is a probability distribution defined on real-valued positive-definite matrices. In Bayesian statistics it is used as the conjugate prior for the covariance matrix of a multivariate normal distribution.