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Computes the (partial) pivoted cholesky decomposition of matrix.
tfp.math.pivoted_cholesky(
matrix, max_rank, diag_rtol=0.001, return_pivoting_order=False, name=None
)
The pivoted Cholesky is a low rank approximation of the Cholesky decomposition
of matrix, i.e. as described in [(Harbrecht et al., 2012)][1]. The
currently-worst-approximated diagonal element is selected as the pivot at each
iteration. This yields from a [B1...Bn, N, N] shaped matrix a [B1...Bn,
N, K] shaped rank-K approximation lr such that lr @ lr.T ~= matrix.
Note that, unlike the Cholesky decomposition, lr is not triangular even in
a rectangular-matrix sense. However, under a permutation it could be made
triangular (it has one more zero in each column as you move to the right).
Such a matrix can be useful as a preconditioner for conjugate gradient
optimization, i.e. as in [(Wang et al. 2019)][2], as matmuls and solves can be
cheaply done via the Woodbury matrix identity, as implemented by
tf.linalg.LinearOperatorLowRankUpdate.
Returns | |
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lr
|
Low rank pivoted Cholesky approximation of matrix.
|
perm
|
(Optional) pivoting order used to produce lr.
|
References
[1]: H Harbrecht, M Peters, R Schneider. On the low-rank approximation by the pivoted Cholesky decomposition. Applied numerical mathematics, 62(4):428-440, 2012.
[2]: K. A. Wang et al. Exact Gaussian Processes on a Million Data Points. arXiv preprint arXiv:1903.08114, 2019. https://arxiv.org/abs/1903.08114
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