Abstract
Invariant Coordinate Selection (ICS) is a multivariate technique that relies on the simultaneous diagonalization of two scatter matrices. It serves various purposes, including its use as a dimension reduction tool prior to clustering or outlier detection. ICS’s theoretical foundation establishes why and when the identified subspace should contain relevant information by demonstrating its connection with the Fisher discriminant subspace (FDS). These general results have been examined in detail primarily for specific scatter combinations within a two-cluster framework. In this study, we expand these investigations to include more clusters and scatter combinations. Our analysis reveals the importance of distinguishing whether the group centers matrix has full rank. In the full-rank case, we establish deeper connections between ICS and FDS. We provide a detailed study of these relationships for three clusters when the group centers matrix has full rank and when it does not. Based on these expanded theoretical insights and supported by numerical studies, we conclude that ICS is indeed suitable for recovering the FDS under very general settings and cases of failure seem rare.
Keywords
Dimension reduction; Mixture of elliptical distributions; Scatter matrix; Simultaneous diagonalization; Subspace estimation;
Replaces
Colombe Becquart, Aurore Archimbaud, Anne Ruiz-Gazen, Luka Prilé, and Klaus Nordhausen, “Invariant Coordinate Selection and Fisher Discriminant Subspace Beyond The Case of Two Groups”, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1579, September 2024.
Reference
Colombe Becquart, Aurore Archimbaud, Anne M. Ruiz, Luka Prilc, and Klaus Nordhausen, “Invariant Coordinate Selection and Fisher discriminant subspace beyond the case of two group”, Journal of Multivariate Analysis, vol. 211, n. 105521, January 2026.
Published in
Journal of Multivariate Analysis, vol. 211, n. 105521, January 2026
