Algorithm to extract linearly dependent columns in a matrix

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Is there any general or standard approach to extract columns that are linearly dependent from the given matrix ?
Thanks and any help is apperciated !

Accepted Answer

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 3 Aug 2020
It is difficult to answer this. Consider a simple matrix:
format short g
A = rand(4,5)
A =
0.73796 0.36725 0.042904 0.0056783 0.45642
0.13478 0.54974 0.60439 0.39645 0.36555
0.4903 0.25921 0.63407 0.77345 0.95769
0.43373 0.27658 0.6462 0.25778 0.23421
The matrix (since it is random) will be of full rank, thus 4 in this case.
EVERY column is linearly dependent. That is, We can write every column as a linear combination of the other 4 columns. I can argue problems exist with other matrices too.
A = magic(6)
A =
35 1 6 26 19 24
3 32 7 21 23 25
31 9 2 22 27 20
8 28 33 17 10 15
30 5 34 12 14 16
4 36 29 13 18 11
rank(A)
ans =
5
So A here has rank 5. But again, we can write any column of A as a linear combination of the other 5. So which column is linearly dependent? They all are!
Perhaps you might get something out of the null space vector(s).
Anull = null(A);
Anull = Anull/Anull(1)
Anull =
1
1
-0.5
-1
-1
0.5
This gives us the linear combination of importance as:
A(:,1) + A(:,2) - 0.5*A(:,3) - A(:,4) - A(:,5) + 0.5*A(:,6) = 0
We can now solve for ANY of those columns, in terms of the others.
How it helps you, I don't really know, because I have no idea what you really want to do.
If I had to guess, what you really need is to learn enough about linear algebra, and perhaps what a pivoted QR decomposition might provide. Because once you have that pivoted QR, you also have enough to do almost anything you want to do.
[Q,R,E] = qr(A,0)
Q =
-0.017647 0.64381 -0.20699 0.22818 0.49018 0.5
-0.56472 -0.11589 -0.45002 0.59421 -0.33476 -3.7638e-16
-0.15883 0.52674 -0.446 -0.47355 -0.15542 -0.5
-0.49413 -0.0017098 0.37629 0.14508 0.58583 -0.5
-0.088237 0.52963 0.62872 0.19923 -0.52605 -4.2484e-16
-0.63531 -0.11878 0.13728 -0.55665 -0.059779 0.5
R =
-56.666 -16.377 -42.107 -33.53 -33.53 -35.224
0 53.915 18.611 30.231 30.676 29.048
0 0 32.491 -7.9245 -8.9182 -11.289
0 0 0 10.101 5.6138 -0.56312
0 0 0 0 5.1649 -5.1649
0 0 0 0 0 -2.0136e-15
E =
2 1 3 6 4 5
We can use the QR to tell us much about the problem, as well as efficiently and stably provide all you need.
First, notice that Q(6,6) is essentially zero, compared to the other diagonal elements.
As well, the QR tells us that it decided column 5 (that is the last element of E) is the one it wants to drop out.
  17 Comments
Nguyen Le
Nguyen Le on 8 Jun 2023
How fast is this method compare to build a chain of growing subspaces, check for the rank and only keep the columns that increases the rank of the subspaces
Matt J
Matt J on 8 Jun 2023
Edited: Matt J on 8 Jun 2023
@Nguyen Le I suspect that method would be a lot slower because it could require O(N) svd operations to compute the rank. Additionally, it would be difficult to decide what numerical tolerance parameter to choose for the submatrix rank computations. Consider for example,
A=[1e-20 1;
1e-20 1];
B=[1e-20 2e-20;
1e-20 2e-20];
Numerically, the first column of A should be considered to have rank 0, whereas the same column in matrix B should be considered to have rank 1. But there's no way to know that without somehow choosing rank()'s tolerance parameter adaptively based on the entire matrix. With the selections below, we get the opposite results from what we would want:
rank(A(:,1))
ans = 1
rank(B(:,1),1e-10)
ans = 0

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More Answers (2)

Matt J
Matt J on 4 Aug 2020
  1 Comment
HN
HN on 4 Aug 2020
Edited: HN on 4 Aug 2020
Thank you Matt J
I just found it a bit earlier before you post it here and it clears everything for me !
Thank you

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Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 3 Aug 2020
Edited: Bruno Luong on 3 Aug 2020
Test matrix (10 x 6) with rank 4
M = rand(10,4)*rand(4,6)
Automatic selection of independent columns of M
[Q,R,p] = qr(M,'vector');
dr = abs(diag(R));
if dr(1)
tol = 1e-10;
r = find(dr>=tol*dr(1),1,'last');
ci = p(1:r) % here is the index of independent columns
else
r = 0;
ci = [];
end
% Submatrix with r columns (and full column rank).
Mind=M(:,ci)
% Those three rank estimation should be equals
% if it's not then the cause if MATLAB selection of tolerance for rank differs with the above
% and usage of more robust SVD algorithm for rank estimation
rank(Mind)
rank(M)
r
  14 Comments
Henry Wolkowicz
Henry Wolkowicz on 30 Oct 2021
I now see the problem, i.e. qr behaves differently with sparse input matrix X. It is fine with X=full(X)
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 31 Oct 2021
When you apply qr with permutation on sparse matrix S
[Q,R,p] = qr(S,'vector')
MATLAB returns the permutation to have R having "good" sparse pattern, and does not make the diagonal
abs(diag(R))
decreasing (this requirement usually makes R fully filled with non-zeros elements).

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