Positive Semidefinite Matrix Factorization: A Connection with Phase Retrieval and Affine Rank Minimization
Positive semidefinite matrix factorization (PSDMF) expresses each entry of a nonnegative matrix as the inner product of two positive semidefinite (psd) matrices. When all these psd matrices are constrained to be diagonal, this model is equivalent to nonnegative matrix factorization. Applications include combinatorial optimization, quantum-based statistical models, and recommender systems, among others. However, despite the increasing interest in PSDMF, only a few PSDMF algorithms were proposed in the literature. In this paper, we show that PSDMF algorithms can be designed based on phase retrieval (PR) and affine rank minimization (ARM) algorithms. This procedure allows a significant shortcut in designing new PSDMF algorithms, as it allows to leverage some of the useful numerical properties of existing PR and ARM methods to the PSDMF framework. Motivated by this idea, we introduce a new family of PSDMF algorithms based on singular value projection (SVP) and iterative hard thresholding (IHT). This family subsumes previously-proposed projected gradient PSDMF methods; additionally, we show a new connection between SVP-based methods and majorization-minimization. Numerical experiments show that our proposed methods outperform state-of-the-art coordinate descent algorithms in terms of convergence speed and computational complexity, in certain scenarios. In certain cases, our proposed normalized-IHT-based method is the only algorithm able to find a solution. These results support our claim that the PSDMF framework can inherit desired numerical properties from PR and ARM algorithms, leading to more efficient PSDMF algorithms, and motivate further study of the links between these models.
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