Blind multilinear identification

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Abstract

We discuss a technique that allows blind recovery of signals or blind identification of mixtures in instances where such recovery or identification were previously thought to be impossible. These instances include: 1) closely located or highly correlated sources in antenna array processing; 2) highly correlated spreading codes in code division multiple access (CDMA) radio communication; and 3) nearly dependent spectra in fluorescence spectroscopy. These have important implications. In the case of antenna array processing, it allows for joint localization and extraction of multiple sources from the measurement of a noisy mixture recorded on multiple sensors in an entirely deterministic manner. In the case of CDMA, it allows the possibility of having a number of users larger than the spreading gain. In the case of fluorescence spectroscopy, it allows for detection of nearly identical chemical constituents. The proposed technique involves the solution of a bounded coherence low-rank multilinear approximation problem. We show that bounded coherence allows us to establish existence and uniqueness of the recovered solution. We will provide some statistical motivation for the approximation problem and discuss greedy approximation bounds. To provide the theoretical underpinnings for this technique, we develop a corresponding theory of sparse separable decompositions of functions, including notions of rank and nuclear norm that can be specialized to the usual ones for matrices and operators and also be applied to hypermatrices and tensors. © 1963-2012 IEEE.

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APA

Lim, L. H., & Comon, P. (2014). Blind multilinear identification. IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 60(2), 1260–1280. https://doi.org/10.1109/TIT.2013.2291876

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