Clustering by the local intrinsic dimension: the hidden structure of real-world data
It is well known that a small number of variables is often sufficient to effectively describe high-dimensional data. This number is called the intrinsic dimension (ID) of the data. What is not so commonly known is that the ID can vary within the same dataset. This fact has been highlighted in technical discussions, but seldom exploited to gain practical insight in the data structure. Here we develop a simple and robust approach to cluster regions with the same local ID in a given data landscape. Surprisingly, we find that many real-world data sets contain regions with widely heterogeneous dimensions. These regions host points differing in core properties: folded vs unfolded configurations in a protein molecular dynamics trajectory, active vs non-active regions in brain imaging data, and firms with different financial risk in company balance sheets. Our results show that a simple topological feature, the local ID, is sufficient to uncover a rich structure in high-dimensional data landscapes.
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