How to remove dependent rows in a matrix?

23 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Kees Roos
Kees Roos el 5 de Oct. de 2012
Comentada: Arash Rabbani el 24 de Ag. de 2019
Let A be an m by n matrix whose rows are linearly dependent. I want to remove rows from A such that the rank does not decrease. How can I find such rows of A?

Respuesta aceptada

Matt J
Matt J el 5 de Oct. de 2012
function [Xsub,idx]=licols(X,tol)
%Extract a linearly independent set of columns of a given matrix X
%
% [Xsub,idx]=licols(X)
%
%in:
%
% X: The given input matrix
% tol: A rank estimation tolerance. Default=1e-10
%
%out:
%
% Xsub: The extracted columns of X
% idx: The indices (into X) of the extracted columns
if ~nnz(X) %X has no non-zeros and hence no independent columns
Xsub=[]; idx=[];
return
end
if nargin<2, tol=1e-10; end
[Q, R, E] = qr(X,0);
if ~isvector(R)
diagr = abs(diag(R));
else
diagr = R(1);
end
%Rank estimation
r = find(diagr >= tol*diagr(1), 1, 'last'); %rank estimation
idx=sort(E(1:r));
Xsub=X(:,idx);
  11 comentarios
mohsen
mohsen el 28 de Jun. de 2014
I calculate rank with Matlab rank() function. it says the rank is 225
I must decrease raws from 398 to 261 without decreasing rnak,and you said the licols function removes raws ,but it removes columns.
Matt J
Matt J el 28 de Jun. de 2014
Editada: Matt J el 28 de Jun. de 2014
Matlab's rank() function is not to be trusted blindly (as you can see from my previous plot). If nothing else, rank is subjectively dependent on the tolerance parameter that you use, just like I showed you that licols is. You chose to use the default tolerance, but a different choice would give you a different result, e.g.,
>> rank(docoeff,2)
ans =
203
I did not say that licols() removes rows. The help text clearly says that it removes columns. However, you can certainly use it to remove rows by transposing:
>> X=licols(docoeff.').'; whos X
Name Size Bytes Class Attributes
X 160x225 288000 double

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Más respuestas (2)

Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) el 24 de En. de 2014
Another, very straightforward, approach is to include them one by one and observe the changes in rank … (I agree that this is not so elegant!).
N = size(A,1) ; % number of rows
IncludeTF = false(N,1) ; % by default, exclude all rows, except ...
IncludeTF(1) = true ; % first row which can always be included
R0 = rank(A) ; % the original rank
for k = 2:N, % loop over all rows
B = A(IncludeTF,:) ; % select the currently included rows of A
IncludeTF(k) = rank(B) < R0 ; % include in B when the rank is less
end
isequal(rank(B), R0) % check!
  1 comentario
Jeel Bhavsar
Jeel Bhavsar el 24 de Nov. de 2018
I have the same question with gf matrix.Does this code work for gf(galois field) matrix?

Iniciar sesión para comentar.


Arash Rabbani
Arash Rabbani el 24 de Ag. de 2019
This is a shorter version of Jos solution if you needed:
R1=1;
for I=1:size(A,1)
R2=rank(A(1:I,:));
if R2~=R1; disp(I); end
R1=R2+1;
end
  1 comentario
Arash Rabbani
Arash Rabbani el 24 de Ag. de 2019
It displays the rows with linear dependany to other rows.

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Categorías

Más información sobre Linear Algebra en Help Center y File Exchange.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by