Independent Mechanism Analysis and the Manifold Hypothesis
Independent Mechanism Analysis (IMA) seeks to address non-identifiability in nonlinear Independent Component Analysis (ICA) by assuming that the Jacobian of the mixing function has orthogonal columns. As typical in ICA, previous work focused on the case with an equal number of latent components and...
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Zusammenfassung: | Independent Mechanism Analysis (IMA) seeks to address non-identifiability in
nonlinear Independent Component Analysis (ICA) by assuming that the Jacobian of
the mixing function has orthogonal columns. As typical in ICA, previous work
focused on the case with an equal number of latent components and observed
mixtures. Here, we extend IMA to settings with a larger number of mixtures that
reside on a manifold embedded in a higher-dimensional than the latent space --
in line with the manifold hypothesis in representation learning. For this
setting, we show that IMA still circumvents several non-identifiability issues,
suggesting that it can also be a beneficial principle for higher-dimensional
observations when the manifold hypothesis holds. Further, we prove that the IMA
principle is approximately satisfied with high probability (increasing with the
number of observed mixtures) when the directions along which the latent
components influence the observations are chosen independently at random. This
provides a new and rigorous statistical interpretation of IMA. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2312.13438 |