Centering matrix
In mathematics and multivariate statistics, the centering matrix[1] is a symmetric and idempotent matrix, which when multiplied with a vector has the same effect as subtracting the mean of the components of the vector from every component of that vector.
Definition
The centering matrix of size n is defined as the n-by-n matrix
where is the identity matrix of size n and is an n-by-n matrix of all 1's.
For example
- ,
- ,
Properties
Given a column-vector, of size n, the centering property of can be expressed as
where is a column vector of ones and is the mean of the components of .
is symmetric positive semi-definite.
is idempotent, so that , for . Once the mean has been removed, it is zero and removing it again has no effect.
is singular. The effects of applying the transformation cannot be reversed.
has the eigenvalue 1 of multiplicity n − 1 and eigenvalue 0 of multiplicity 1.
has a nullspace of dimension 1, along the vector .
is an orthogonal projection matrix. That is, is a projection of onto the (n − 1)-dimensional subspace that is orthogonal to the nullspace . (This is the subspace of all n-vectors whose components sum to zero.)
Application
Although multiplication by the centering matrix is not a computationally efficient way of removing the mean from a vector, it is a convenient analytical tool. It can be used not only to remove the mean of a single vector, but also of multiple vectors stored in the rows or columns of an m-by-n matrix .
The left multiplication by subtracts a corresponding mean value from each of the n columns, so that each column of the product has a zero mean. Similarly, the multiplication by on the right subtracts a corresponding mean value from each of the m rows, and each row of the product has a zero mean. The multiplication on both sides creates a doubly centred matrix , whose row and column means are equal to zero.
The centering matrix provides in particular a succinct way to express the scatter matrix, of a data sample , where is the sample mean. The centering matrix allows us to express the scatter matrix more compactly as
is the covariance matrix of the multinomial distribution, in the special case where the parameters of that distribution are , and .
References
- John I. Marden, Analyzing and Modeling Rank Data, Chapman & Hall, 1995, ISBN 0-412-99521-2, page 59.