Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1180964 | Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Three-way arrays (or tensors) can be regarded as extensions of the traditional two-way data matrices that have a third dimension. Studying algebraic properties of arrays is relevant, for example, for the Tucker three-way PCA method, which generalizes principal component analysis to three-way data. One important algebraic property of arrays is concerned with the possibility of transformations to simplicity. An array is said to be transformed to a simple form when it can be manipulated by a sequence of invertible operations such that a vast majority of its entries become zero. This paper shows how 3Â ÃÂ 3Â ÃÂ 3 arrays, whether symmetric or nonsymmetric, can be transformed to a simple form with 18 out of its 27 entries equal to zero. We call this simple form the “knight's move pattern” due to a loose resemblance to the moves of a knight in a game of chess. The pattern was examined by Kiers, Ten Berge, and Rocci. It will be shown how the knight's move pattern can be found by means of a numeric-algebraic procedure based on the Gröbner basis. This approach seems to work almost surely for randomly generated arrays, whether symmetric or nonsymmetric.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Jorge N. Tendeiro, Jos M.F. Ten Berge, Vartan Choulakian,