Efficient way to split a vector into Matrix

3 views (last 30 days)
Hi,
I am looking for an efficient way to do the following:
Take an input vector, e.g B = [2;5;8;11;3;6;9;15]
and return the array
D = [2 5 8 11 3;5 8 11 3 6;8 11 3 6 9]
, ie each column is a rolling subvector of B
My attempt below works but it causes a bottleneck in my programme. I have been trying to vectorize it but am finding it difficult.
If somebody has thoughts I would appreciate a pointer.
Thanks!
function ret = MakeMatrix(inputVector, inputLookbackPeriod, numPeriodsToCalculate)
m_Array = zeros(inputLookbackPeriod, numPeriodsToCalculate);
for i=1:numPeriodsToCalculate
m_Array(:,i) = inputVector(i:i+inputLookbackPeriod-1,1);
end
end

Accepted Answer

the cyclist
the cyclist on 14 Apr 2011
Here is an obscure way, using a Hilbert matrix. It is semi-coincidental that the indexing you need is exactly the (element-by-element inverse of the) Hilbert matrix.
For something less esoteric, you could probably use the filter command.
function m_Array = MakeMatrixFast(inputVector, inputLookbackPeriod, numPeriodsToCalculate)
H = 1./hilb(max(inputLookbackPeriod,numPeriodsToCalculate));
H = H(1:inputLookbackPeriod,1:numPeriodsToCalculate);
m_Array = inputVector(H);
end
  2 Comments
RoJo
RoJo on 14 Apr 2011
Thanks. This does what I was asking. One point is that as I increase the argument to hilb, e.g 1./hilb(30) the resulting matrix contains 49.000.. which fails inputVector(H). So just needs a conversion before that line.
the cyclist
the cyclist on 14 Apr 2011
Yeah, I should have anticipated that. Can you just put in a rounding command?

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (2)

Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 14 Apr 2011
variant
D0 = buffer(B,5,4);
D = D0(2:end-1,4:end)
  2 Comments
RoJo
RoJo on 14 Apr 2011
Thanks for the reply. I don't have the Signal Processing Toolbox to use the buffer function however.
Teja Muppirala
Teja Muppirala on 14 Apr 2011
You learn something new every day...

Sign in to comment.


Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 14 Apr 2011
IDX = ones(3,5,'single');
IDX(:,1) = 1:3;
D = B(cumsum(IDX,2))
Or, to match your functional form:
function m_Array = MakeMatrixFast2(inputVector, inputLookbackPeriod, numPeriodsToCalculate)
IDX = ones(inputLookbackPeriod,numPeriodsToCalculate,'single');
IDX(:,1) = 1:inputLookbackPeriod;
m_Array = inputVector(cumsum(IDX,2));
  2 Comments
RoJo
RoJo on 14 Apr 2011
Sorry, I didn't refresh the page and see this answer. It works well and is efficient for large/small vectors and lookbacks. Thanks.
Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 14 Apr 2011
That's o.k.! I tested all three algorithms and yours is actually faster than the cyclist's. Mine is somewhat faster than yours for certain inputs.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Loops and Conditional Statements in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!