Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_4
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
The paper discusses the estimation of the cluster tree
when the probability density function is supported on a d dimension
manifold in a D dimensional space. They show that the algorithm RSL
proposed in (1) is consistent and the convergence rate, very roughly,
depends on d-the dimension of the manifold and not on D - the dimension of
the ambient space (but then the convergence rate also depends on tau-the
conditional number and an epsilon^{d+2} factor instead of an epsilon^2
factor).
The main result is achieved by repeating the technique in
(1). To do that, the authors had to show: First,a bound on a size of an
s-net in the manifold setting. Second, bounds on the deformation of the
volume (i.e. that B(x,r)cap M has roughly the volume of a d-dimensional
ball of radius r where d is the dimension of M). The authors are able to
show both under the assumption of small conditional number.
I
think it is interesting to know how convergence rate changes under this
assumption (i.e. manifold assumption) and the paper give both lower bounds
and upper bounds that are not trivial. So even though the convergence rate
depends on sizes that are not available (the dimension of the manifold and
the conditional number), still the results are interesting.
I
found the writing very unclear and certain definitions are even confusing:
******************************* 1) The statement in thm.4 is
wrong. A much stronger statement is proved in thm.6 of [1] than
def.3-consistency. (see also, remark after thm.6 in [1]).
Theorem
6 states that with high probability: uniformly, every A A' that satisfy
(\sigma,\epsilon)-separation: we get separation and conectedness.
Theorem 4 states that for every A A' that satisfy (\sigma,
\epsilon)-seperation, with high probability we get separation and
connectedness.
These are not equivalent statements. Please correct
this. ***************************** 2) Still in definition 3: what
is n? who is C_n (is it a random variable? how is it defined? is it
different than hat{C}) I had to rely on the definition in (1) to
understand what is meant here. 3) When using Lemma 16: It is worth
indexing and mentioning which inequality is used and how at each step. Not
all steps are clear, it seems that at last step you use
(1+4r/t(1+4r/t))(1+4r/t) < (1+6r/t) but that's not even hinted. The
steps should be clearer.
4) Lemma 18: I think a 1/2 is missing
from the definition of v_cap. Worth mentioning that
Gamma(1/2)=sqrt(pi) otherwise it's not clear where it went.
Further suggestions:
The lower bound you produce
depends on the conditional number, it might be worth mentioning the lower
bound you produce are not an improvement over the lower bound in (1), but
are different (e.g. in a linear subspace that has 1/tau=0 your lower bound
is meaningless while (1) gives a sensible lower bound).
Regarding
the parameter \rho, does it really make sense to choose salience parameter
2\sigma > tau? won't it be easier to simply assume (3\sigma/16) <
(\tau/16)? Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
The authors demonstrate how one can generalize results
to the manifold case by having interesting bounds on s-net. I found the
paper not clear enough, and definition 3 is wrong as far as I can
see. Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_5
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
This paper analyzes the robust single linkage
algorithm for finding the cluster tree when the support of the density
lies on a manifold. Previous work [1] proposed and analyzed the algorithm
for the same, when the density is supported on the entire space. This
paper shows that the same algorithm could be used in the manifold case
with rates depending just on the manifold dimension rather than the
ambient dimension. The proof flow is very similar to that of [1] with
several modifications to handle the fact that the density is actually
supported on a manifold.
The main point conveyed by the paper
seems to be not emphasized sufficiently - despite the fact that the
density lies on a manifold, the same RSL algorithm that is based on
euclidean distance achieves rates that depend only the manifold dimension
- giving some intuition for this fact (say even with a simple synthetic
example) might help the reader a lot. Since the proofs are more or less
based on similar arguments as that of [1], it is not clear what is the
fundamental idea that is behind this phenomenon- at least in the way the
proofs are presented.
I went over the proofs and it seems ok to
me. More discussion about the parameter $\rho$ might be helpful to the
reader - I guess the previous point is related to this fact. Also I do not
really agree with what authors call the 'class of RSL' algorithm (which
has some consequences in terms of understanding the implications of the
lower bound). Specifically what does ' of the form described in the
algorithm in Figure 1' mean - isn't just this one algorithm in that case ?
Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
This paper analyzes the robust single linkage
algorithm for finding the cluster tree when the support of the density
lies on a manifold and shows that RSL algorithm that is based on euclidean
distance achieves rates that depend only the manifold
dimension. Submitted by
Assigned_Reviewer_7
Q1: Comments to author(s).
First provide a summary of the paper, and then address the following
criteria: Quality, clarity, originality and significance. (For detailed
reviewing guidelines, see
http://nips.cc/PaperInformation/ReviewerInstructions)
This paper presents an analysis of a k-nearest
neighbor based algorithm recently proposed by Chaudhuri and Dasgupta for
the case where the data is on or concentrated on a manifold. The key
result is that the convergence rate depends on the dimension of the
underlying manifold. To obtain the result on the manifold the authors
adapt the theory used in Chaudhuri and Dasgupta to the manifold case using
the sampling tools developed in Niyogi, Smale, Weinberger. In the case
where the data is concentrated on a manifold the use the tools developed
by a serious of papers by Rinaldi and others.
The theory seems
correct and these are nice results. The algorithm analyzed may be more
appropriate for stratified spaces than manifolds but this is a more minor
point. The one negative about this paper is that the algorithm is not
novel and many of the theoretical tools used are not novel. However, this
complaint can be made of many theoretical papers in
NIPs. Q2: Please summarize your review in 1-2
sentences
The authors present a theoretical analysis of cluster
trees on manifolds and show the rate is a function of the manifold.
Q1:Author
rebuttal: Please respond to any concerns raised in the reviews. There are
no constraints on how you want to argue your case, except for the fact
that your text should be limited to a maximum of 6000 characters. Note
however that reviewers and area chairs are very busy and may not read long
vague rebuttals. It is in your own interest to be concise and to the
point.
We would like to thank the reviewers for their
comments and valuable feedback. We will revise the manuscript to address
some of the reviewers concerns and we briefly discuss these concerns here.
Reviewer 5 makes some excellent suggestions and we will
incorporate a longer discussion of these in the revised version of the
manuscript. The main intuition for why the RSL algorithm is able to take
advantage of the manifold structure and achieve rates that depend only on
the manifold dimension is that when the density is supported on or near a
lower dimensional manifold, balls around sample contain many more points
than one would expect if the manifold hypothesis were not true. This is
for instance reflected in the k-NN distance which for a point in a region
of density \lambda intuitively behaves as (k/(nv_D \lambda))^{1/D} for
full dimensional densities but is much smaller, i.e. (k/(nv_d
\lambda))^{1/d}, for densities on or near a well conditioned d-dimensional
manifold. This lets one resolve the cluster tree from fewer samples. We
will describe this in more detail and include a synthetic example in the
paper to help build intuition.
The rates of convergence for the
RSL algorithm are fundamentally determined by the radius of the largest
ball that one can use in resolving the clusters. In the Euclidean case the
separation of the clusters (\sigma) constrains the largest ball. In the
manifold case this radius is determined by three distinct effects. The
parameter \rho is determined (ignoring constants and d terms) by the
minimum of \sigma, \tau, and \epsilon \tau/d (notice that since d can be 0
the last term is not dominated by the first). \sigma is as before. \tau is
a spatial effect because of the curvature of the manifold and \epsilon
\tau/d is a density effect. Intuitively using larger balls than \tau can
cause a spatial chaining across separate regions of the manifold, and
using balls of radius larger than \epsilon \tau/d means the RSL algorithm
cannot distinguish densities of \lambda and \lambda(1-\epsilon) in regions
of different curvature.
Regarding the terminology, by "the class
of RSL algorithms", we really meant the RSL algorithm with any choice of
the various tuning parameters. It is however easy to see that the lower
bound for instance also applies to algorithms that output the cluster tree
of a kernel density estimate. We will clarify this further.
We
thank Reviewer 4 for a careful reading of the manuscript. The reviewer had
several complaints regarding the writing which we now address. (1)
Regarding the uniformity over sets A and A', we would like to first
emphasize that (modulo the typo from the second point below) the
definition is identical to the one used in the paper of [1] and the
results in our paper are not weaker than those in [1]. The results are not
uniform over clusters A and A' in the sense that for a given value of n,
there can be clusters A and A' that are not resolved (ones that have
\sigma and \epsilon small enough as a function of n, this is clear since
the rates depend on \sigma and \epsilon). They are however uniform over
the class of \sigma, \epsilon clusters, i.e. for a fixed value of \sigma
and \epsilon there is an n large enough so that all \sigma, \epsilon
clusters are resolved (no matter how many such pairs there are). This
is identical to the situation in [1] and the results we have are not
weaker in this sense. We will clarify this point further. (2) We will
change C_n to \hat{C}. (3) We will clarify the steps. (4) We have
checked and there is no 1/2 missing, the reviewer is possibly confusing
the formula for volume with the one for area (we are calculating the
d-dimensional volume of a spherical cap which in standard terminology is
the area of the spherical cap on S^d). We will clarify this.
Regarding the two additional suggestions. We will clarify the
relation between our lower bound and the lower bound in [1], as the
reviewer pointed out they are not directly comparable. Our lower bound is
intended to be complementary to the one in [1] in that it explains a
different aspect of the \rho parameter.
Regarding whether it makes
sense to choose 2\sigma > \tau, we should emphasize that \sigma is in
some sense a user specified parameter and \tau is an intrinsic one. \sigma
can be much larger than \tau for instance if the manifold consists of two
poorly conditioned pieces that are well separated, and the user wishes to
only resolve the pieces.
We thank Reviewer 7 for the valuable
feedback. Reviewer 7's main concern is regarding the novelty of the
techniques used in the paper. While it is true that we base our main proof
and theorem on the work of [1] (and others), we should point out that the
results of [1] have only trivial implications for the cases we consider
when the density is singular. We would also like to emphasize a few novel
aspects of our work. (1) We use different arguments to show both
connection and separation, the choice of tuning parameters is different
because we need to account for the curvature of the manifold in various
places, and the core large deviation inequality while similar in form is
proved using fundamentally different techniques. (2) We would also
like to emphasize that our lower bound is completely different in both its
proof and implication. (3) We have in this paper initiated the study
of noisy cluster tree recovery. To study the noisy case we have introduced
two new natural notions of consistency -- in the clutter noise case we
consider consistency of only the samples generated from the "true"
distribution and in the case of additive noise we consider consider
consistency of the latent (before contamination by additive noise)
samples. In each case we specify conditions under which we can resolve the
whole or parts of the cluster tree.
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