How to divide large data in small intervals?

How to divide a large matrix into small intervals?
For example, take the matrix [1 1; 1 2; 2 3; ...;5 100; 6 100; ...; 1 1.0e4; ...; 5 1.0e9] with many entries.
How to efficiently divide the second column into intervals of length 1, e.g. [0,1], [1,2]...[1000,1001] and so on such that, for each interval, the elements of the first column sum to 1.
Small example: M = [1 1; 2 1; 1 10; 3 10];
The output should be:
M_out = [0.333 1; 0.6667 1; 0.25 10; 0.75 10]
Take M=[1 1; 2 1; 1 1.5; 1 10; 1 10.6; 3 10];
M_out = [0.25 1; 0.5 1; 0.25 1.5; 0.20 10; 0.20 10.6; 0.6 10]
The solution could be
for i=1:1.0e9; j=find (i <= M(:,2) & M(:,2) < i+1); M(j,1) = M(j,1)./sum(M(j,1)); end
However, is it an efficiently way to do it?

2 Kommentare

Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 22 Apr. 2016
Bearbeitet: Image Analyst am 22 Apr. 2016
Is this your homework?
Anderson
Anderson am 22 Apr. 2016
Bearbeitet: Jan am 22 Apr. 2016
No.
The solution could be
for i=1:1.0e9;
j=find (i <= M(:,2) & M(:,2) < i+1);
M(j,1) = M(j,1)./sum(M(j,1));
end
However, is it an efficiently way to do it?

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

 Akzeptierte Antwort

Guillaume
Guillaume am 22 Apr. 2016
Bearbeitet: Guillaume am 22 Apr. 2016

0 Stimmen

It's not very clear from your question that you want to bin the second column in bins of width 1, and you haven't given a criteria for the bin edges. Should the edges always be integer?
Anyway, find out which bin your second column falls into with discretize and use these bins as input to accumarray as per Star's or the cyclist's answer:
M = [1 1; 2 1; 1 1.5; 1 10; 1 10.6; 3 10];
%compute bins. Assume integer edges
binlow = floor(min(M(:, 2)));
binhigh = ceil(max(M(:, 2)));
if binhigh == max(M(:, 2)), binhigh = binhigh + 1; end %otherwise if max is integer it'll be included in the previous bin
binidx = discretize(M(:, 2), binlow : binhigh);
%apply to accumarray
binsum = accumarray(binidx, M(:, 1));
%normalise
M_out = [M(:, 1) ./ binsum(binidx), M(:, 2)]

2 Kommentare

Anderson
Anderson am 22 Apr. 2016
Bearbeitet: Anderson am 22 Apr. 2016
Thank you for your reply.
Yes, the edges are integer and the range is large: from 0 to 1.0e9.
Is there a way to not use discretize function? This function is not available for previous MATLAB versions.
If you're not using up to date matlab, please mention it in your question.
Any histogram function will do, the second return value of histc will work. Since histc behaves differently for the last edge, the code becomes:
binlow = floor(min(M(:, 2)));
binhigh = ceil(max(M(:, 2))) + 1; %always add an extra bin
[~, binidx] = histc(M(:, 2), binlow:binhigh);
%accumarray code as before

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Weitere Antworten (1)

the cyclist
the cyclist am 22 Apr. 2016
Bearbeitet: the cyclist am 22 Apr. 2016

0 Stimmen

M = [1 1; 2 1; 1 10; 3 10];
[~,~,idx] = unique(M(:,2));
S = accumarray(idx,M(:,1),[]);
M_out = [M(:,1)./S(idx),M(:,2)]

1 Kommentar

Anderson
Anderson am 22 Apr. 2016
This solution does not divide the second column into intervals of length 1.
Take M=[1 1; 2 1; 1 1.5; 1 10; 1 10.6; 3 10];
M_out = [0.25 1; 0.5 1; 0.25 1.5; 0.20 10; 0.20 10.6; 0.6 10]

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Kategorien

Gefragt:

am 22 Apr. 2016

Kommentiert:

am 22 Apr. 2016

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by