rkh operator
Singular Value Decomposition of Operators on Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Spaces
Mollenhauer, Mattes, Schuster, Ingmar, Klus, Stefan, Schütte, Christof
Reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces (RKHSs) play an important role in many statistics and machine learning applications ranging from support vector machines to Gaussian processes and kernel embeddings of distributions. Operators acting on such spaces are, for instance, required to embed conditional probability distributions in order to implement the kernel Bayes rule and build sequential data models. It was recently shown that transfer operators such as the Perron-Frobenius or Koopman operator can also be approximated in a similar fashion using covariance and cross-covariance operators and that eigenfunctions of these operators can be obtained by solving associated matrix eigenvalue problems. The goal of this paper is to provide a solid functional analytic foundation for the eigenvalue decomposition of RKHS operators and to extend the approach to the singular value decomposition. The results are illustrated with simple guiding examples.
Kernel canonical correlation analysis approximates operators for the detection of coherent structures in dynamical data
Klus, Stefan, Husic, Brooke E., Mollenhauer, Mattes
We illustrate relationships between classical kernel-based dimensionality reduction techniques and eigendecompositions of empirical estimates of reproducing kernel Hilbert space (RKHS) operators associated with dynamical systems. In particular, we show that kernel canonical correlation analysis (CCA) can be interpreted in terms of kernel transfer operators and that coherent sets of particle trajectories can be computed by applying kernel CCA to Lagrangian data. We demonstrate the efficiency of this approach with several examples, namely the well-known Bickley jet, ocean drifter data, and a molecular dynamics problem with a time-dependent potential. Furthermore, we propose a straightforward generalization of dynamic mode decomposition (DMD) called coherent mode decomposition (CMD).