2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.sigpro.2005.03.006
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Blind source separation of positive and partially correlated data

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Cited by 56 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…Likewise, Full et al already considered the same simplex volume minimization principle as Craig's in the 1980s [31]. CG has also been independently discovered in other fields such as chemometrics [32] and SP [33], [34]. In all the discoveries or rediscoveries mentioned above, the driving force that led researchers on different backgrounds to devise the same idea seems to be with the geometric elegance of CG and its powerful implications on solving blind unmixing problems.…”
Section: Who Discovered Convex Geometry For Blind Unmixing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Likewise, Full et al already considered the same simplex volume minimization principle as Craig's in the 1980s [31]. CG has also been independently discovered in other fields such as chemometrics [32] and SP [33], [34]. In all the discoveries or rediscoveries mentioned above, the driving force that led researchers on different backgrounds to devise the same idea seems to be with the geometric elegance of CG and its powerful implications on solving blind unmixing problems.…”
Section: Who Discovered Convex Geometry For Blind Unmixing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since (33) is NP-hard in general, it is natural to seek approximate solutions. Let us consider the popularized 1 , relaxation solution to (33):…”
Section: Sparse Regressionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 1 H NMR spectrum of any biological fluid is a superposition of the spectra of great number of compounds. Quantification and identification of the components present in the mixture is a traditional problem not only in NMR spectroscopy [3][4][5] but also in infrared (IR) spectroscopy [6,12], EPR spectroscopy [7,8], mass spectrometry [9,10,12], Raman spectroscopy [11], etc. Identification of the spectra of mixtures proceeds in majority of the cases by matching the mixture's spectra with a library reference compounds, [3,[6][7][8].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This sparseness condition was first known in the 1990s [1,22] in the study of blind hyper-spectral unmixing of remote sensing, where the source condition is called pixel purity assumption (PPA) [2]. In 2005, Naanaa and Nuzillard [14] used this assumption to separate the signals in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In fact, this condition is well suited to many chemical substances including those studied in this paper.…”
Section: Convex Blind Source Separationmentioning
confidence: 99%