Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis Based on Complete Idempotent Semifields
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Its dual semifield is , the (completed) min-plus algebra, or tropical semiring.
1.1. Galois Connections between Idempotent Semimodules and Formal Concept Analysis
- The context analysis phase.
- (a)
- The polar operators and .form a Galois connection whose formal concepts are the pairs of closed elements such that whence the set of formal concepts is
- (b)
- Formal concepts are partially ordered with the hierarchical orderand the set of formal concepts with this order is a complete lattice called the concept lattice of .
- (c)
- In infima and suprema are given by:
- (d)
- The basic functions andare mappings such that is supremum-dense in , is infimum-dense in .
- The context synthesis phase.
- (a)
- A complete lattice is isomorphic to (read “can be built as”) the concept lattice if and only if there are mappings and such that
- is supremum-dense in , is infimum-dense in , and
- is equivalent to for all and all .
- (b)
- In particular, consider the doubling context of , , and the standard context of , where and are the sets of join- and meet-irreducibles, respectively, of , then
1.2. -Formal Concept Analysis as Linear Algebra over Idempotent Semifields
- This proposition only provides the Galois connection for -FCA equivalent to the analysis part of Theorem 1. The synthesis part is only partially supported by the above-mentioned procedure of embedding FCA into -FCA by means of restricting the entries of the matrix to only the extreme values. We would like a more general result than this.
- In [24] it was proven that -FCA is best-understood in terms of the linear algebra of the semivector spaces over —or semimodules—that are the isomorphic sets of (7). The proof of the proposition uses both algebra over and , so it is actually a mixture of algebras that does the trick of reducing FCA to linear algebra.
- For concrete algebras, we typically consider that the below-dotted reference is for semifields whose order aligns with the usual order in , if available, and this is the one we call . Changing this semifield to its order-dual is what we call changing the bias of the analysis, and this procedure should obtain a -FCA.
1.3. The 4-Fold Connection
1.4. Reading Guide
- (1)
- the four-fold Galois connections related to an idempotent semifield-valued matrix;
- (2)
- what are the implications of a change of bias, that is, using for the analysis;
- (3)
- the relation to LC, in general, and to Formal Concept Analysis, in particular, and
- (4)
- the relationship of these techniques with other types of FCA.
2. Linear Algebra over Complete Idempotent and Positive Semifields
2.1. Homomorphims of Complete -semimodules
- The bikernel of F, is the equivalence:with blocks so that .
- Its orthogonal (set) is
- In this paper we use kernel to refer to monotone, contractive idempotent endomorphisms of ordered sets in Appendix A. This justifies the new name of “bikernel”.
- The equivalence classes have no uniform cardinality. Some may be unitary while others have infinite elements.
- The notion of “orthogonality” does not add anything special to the concept of “image” in this set-theoretic context, but it will for algebras.
- is a -subsemimodule of ,
- is a congruence on , that is, an equivalence on that is also a -semimodule of , and
- is isomorphic to .
3. -Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis
3.1. The Four-Fold Galois Connection over Complete Idempotent -Semimodules
- 1.
- The bracket induces a Galois connection between the spaces through the polar maps: Equation (5), whose composition generate closure operators: Equation (6), which define two bijective sets, the system of φ-extents and the system of φ-intents over which the polars are dual order bijections and the closures are identities, respectively: Equation (7).
- 2.
- The bracket induces a co-Galois connection between the scaled spaces through the co-polar maps:whose composition generate interior operators or kernels:which define two bijective sets the system of φ-neighbourhoods of objects or φ-co-extents and φ-neighbourhoods of attributes or φ-co-intents over which the co-polar maps are dual-order bijections and the kernels the identities, respectively.
- 3.
- The bracket induces a left adjunction between the scaled spaces through the left adjunct pair of maps:whose compositions are the closure of extents and kernel of co-intents:which define an order bijection between the system of φ-extents and φ-co-intents over which the closure of extents and kernel of co-intents are identities.
- 4.
- The bracket induces an adjunction on the right between the scaled spaces through the pair of adjunct maps:whose compositions are the kernel of co-extents and the closure of extents:which define another bijection between the system of φ-co-extents and φ-intents over which the kernel of co-extents and the closure of intents are identities,
3.1.1. The Bikernels of the Four-fold Connection
- In the semifield setting, the bikernels of -homomorphisms are already congruences of -semimodules. Therefore, the route provided by Definition 2 of [6] (§ 2.1.4) is clearly the way to define such congruences for adjunctions: from (13) we can see that one adjunct is a -homomorphism while the other is a -homomorphism. These adjuncts already appear in [46] (Remark 3) in explicit matrix form, without the scaling. The row-column dual approach leads to the right adjunction of (16). This entails that in the context of the 4-fold GC we will have, in general, both types of congruence, so from now on we distinguish them as -congruences and -congruences.
- However, for other types of Galois connections, the situation is not so clear. This approach would have to be researched anew for the Galois and co-Galois connection from (5) and (10), since these are join- and meet-inverting, respectively, hence neither - nor -homomorphisms. In particular, although bikernels of these other types of adjuncts are equivalence relations, their relation to their ambient semimodule seems more convoluted.
- 1.
- is a -congruence on isomorphic to , a -subsemimodule of .
- 2.
- is a -congruence on isomorphic to , a -subsemimodule of .
- 3.
- is a -congruence on isomorphic to , a -subsemimodule of .
- 4.
- is a -congruence on isomorphic to , a -subsemimodule of .
- 1.
- The congruence classes of are join-subsemilattices of .
- 2.
- The congruence classes of are join-subsemilattices of .
- 3.
- The congruence classes of are meet-subsemilattices of .
- 4.
- The congruence classes of are meet-subsemilattices of .
- 1.
- Every class in intersects the system of extents at a single point.
- 2.
- Every class in intersects the system of intents at a single point.
- 3.
- Every class in intersects the system of co-extents at a single point.
- 4.
- Every class in intersects the system of co-intents at a single point.
- 1.
- Every extent is the maximum of its congruence class .
- 2.
- Every intent is the maximum of its congruence class .
- 3.
- Every co-extent is the minimum of its congruence class .
- 4.
- Every co-intent is the minimum of its congruence class .
3.1.2. Extremal Exploration in the Four-Fold Connection
- 1.
- If , then andwith
- 2.
- If , then:with
- 3.
- Furthermore, if , then with:
- 1.
- If then
- 2.
- If then
- 3.
- If is totally saturated, then , , , .
- 4.
- When , if has no saturated rows,and if R∈K g×m has no saturated columns,
- 5.
- When the nullspaces are blocks of the bikernels:
3.1.3. Invertible -Exploration in the Four-Fold Connection
- 1.
- The bracket induces a Galois connection between the scaled spaces through the polar maps:whose composition generate closure operators:which define two bijective sets, the system of φ-extents and the system of φ-intents over which the polars are dual order bijections and the closures are identities, respectively.
- 2.
- The bracket induces a co-Galois connection between the scaled spaces through the co-polar maps:whose composition generate interior operators or kernels:which define two bijective sets; the system of φ-neighbourhoods of objects or φ-co-extents and φ-neighbourhoods of attributes or φ-co-intents over which the co-polar maps are dual-order bijections and the kernels the identities, respectively.
- 3.
- The bracket induces a left adjunction between the scaled spaces through the left adjunct pair of maps:whose compositions are the closure of extents and kernel of co-intents:which define an order bijection between the system of φ-extents and φ-co-intents over which the closure of extents and kernel of co-intents are identities.
- 4.
- The bracket induces an adjunction on the right between the scaled spaces through the pair of adjunct maps:whose compositions are the kernel of co-extents and the closure of extents:which define another bijection between the system of φ-co-extents and φ-intents over which the kernel of co-extents and the closure of intents are identities,
- 1.
- The systems of φ-extents, -intents, -co-extents and -co-intents carry a - or -semimodule structure generated by the rows and columns of the matrix:In particular, they are not sub-semimodules of the ambient spaces but their order duals, , , , and .
- 2.
- These structures are isomorphic or dually isomorphic:
- 3.
- In fact, they carry a complete lattice structure with operations:
3.1.4. The Complements and the Tetrahedron Connection
3.1.5. Dual Exploration
- 1.
- The bracket induces a Galois connection between the scaled spaces through the polarswhose composition generates closure operators:which define two bijective sets, the system of φ-extents and the system of φ-intents over which the closures are the identities.
- 2.
- The bracket induces a co-Galois connection between the scaled spaces through the maps:whose composition generate kernel (interior) operators:which define two bijective sets the systems of φ-neighbourhoods of objects or φ-co-extents and φ-neighbourhoods of attributes or φ-co-intents over which the kernel operators are the identities.
- 3.
- The bracket induces a left adjunction between the scaled spaces through the left adjunct pair of maps:whose compositions, are again, the closure of extents and interior of attributes:which define another bijection between the systems of extents and neighbourhoods of attributes :
- 4.
- The bracket induces an adjunction on the right between the scaled spaces through the pair of adjunct maps:whose compositions are, again, the interior of objects and the closure of attributes:which define another bijection between the neighbourhood of objects and system of intents :
- 5.
- The systems of φ-extents, -intents, -co-extents and -co-intents carry a - or -semimodule structure generated by the rows and columns of the matrix:In particular, they are not sub-semimodules of the ambient spaces but their order duals, , , , and .
- 6.
- These structures are isomorphic or dually isomorphic:
- 7.
- In fact, they carry a complete lattice structure with operations:
3.1.6. Generators and Bases
- 1.
- R can be reordered and factorized aswhere I and J are the sets of indices of -independent rows and columns and , respectively.
- 2.
- Alternatively, R can be factorized aswhere and are the sets of -independent columns and rows of R, respectively, and and are the coefficient matrices used to obtain the dependent columns and rows from them.
- 3.
- Furthermore, R can be factorized aswhere and .
- The material in statement 2 was introduced in ([6], Definition 9). The novelty in the lemma is essentially parts 1 and 3.
- Note that the notation highlights the fact that we are using bias. The dual-bias proposition (implicit in the text) should change the notation accordingly to , , etc.
- When referring to the lattices of different matrices, as is the case with R and , we cannot escape their appearing in the notation, as in , since they are, in general, different lattices. The pertinence of the decomposition of R into its independent rows is precisely that the lattices remain the same.
- In the name is fixed since we know that . Indeed, the 4-fold GC dual proves involve using and . However note that in in case we have and therefore (see below).
- We crucially triggered the simplification process for idempotent matrix products by introducing . We also used the fact that products of matrices generate closure (or kernel) operators that allow us to discard the closed (or open) element being operated upon based on the properties of the addition (or ). These two patterns reappear time an again in demonstrations with the blocked forms.
3.2. The Basics of -Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis
3.2.1. Framing the Analysis
- 1.
- Biasing. Choosing a non-empty support K and the actual complete idempotent semifield whether or .
- 2.
- Contextualization. Providing and , the sets of objects and attributes, respectively, with and to build the formal context , since we use -bias.
- 3.
- Scaling. Providing invertible used to scale the left and right semimodules.
- An alternate way to carry out framing that does not alter its result is to first contextualize the analysis and then provide the bias.
- The corner cases for scaling have limited interest, due to Proposition 2.
- In previous work, we have defined a fourth step of framing: Colouring [23] the choice of which type of connection to do an analysis with. -4FCA makes this redundant.
3.2.2. 4-Fold Formal (-)Concepts
- 1.
- if and only if R has no full columns.
- 2.
- if and only if R has no full rows.
3.2.3. A Theorem of -Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis
- The context analysis phase. Consider the scaled spaces of (29).
- (a)
- (b)
- The set of quadriconcepts with the hierarchical order of Definition 4 is a complete lattice called the quadrilattice with infima and suprema given componentwise from (44) as:
- (c)
- The concept-forming functions and—where and select the vectors representing the singletons and , respectively, and and are the matrices of unitary vectors for objects and attributes, respectively—are mappings such that is supremum-dense in , and is infimum-dense in .
- The context synthesis phase.
- (a)
- A complete lattice is isomorphic to (read “can be built as”) the quadrilattice if and only if there are mappings and such that
- is supremum-dense in , is infimum-dense in , and
- is equivalent to for all and all .
- (b)
- In particular, consider the doubling context of , , and the standard context of , where and are the sets of join- and meet-irreducibles, respectively, of , andthen
3.2.4. On the Relation between -4FCA and -4FCA
3.2.5. Applications: Context Reduction and Reconstruction
- 1.
- Every generalized φ-quadriconcept of the generalized concept lattice generates a lower bound in the reconstruction of the matrix,
- 2.
- Every generalized φ-quadriconcept of the generalized concept lattice generates and upper bound in the reconstruction of the matrix,
4. Discussion
4.1. FCA, -Formal Concept Analysis and -4FCA
4.2. The Case for -Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| FCA | Formal Concept Analysis |
| -FCA | semifield-valued Formal Concept Analysis |
| -4FCA | four-fold -FCA |
Appendix A. Residuated Maps, Adjunctions and Galois Connections
- A map is residuated if inverse images of principal (order) ideals of Q under f are again principal ideals. Its residual map or simply residual, is: .
- A map is dually residuated if the inverse images of principal dual (order) ideals under g are again dual ideals. Its dual residual map or simply dual residual, is: .
- 1.
- is an adjunction on the left or simply a left adjunction, and we write iif: , that is, the functions are covariant, and we say that λ is the lower or left adjoint while ρ is the upper or right adjoint .
- 2.
- is an adjunction on the right or simply a right adjunction iff: , both functions are covariant, ρ is the upper adjoint, and λ the lower adjoint.
- 3.
- is a Galois Connection (proper), of two dual adjoints iff: , that is, both functions are contravariant. For that reason they are sometimes named contravariant or symmetric adjunctions on the right.
- 4.
- is a co-Galois connection, of dual adjoints if: , that is, both functions are contravariant. For that reason they are sometimes named contravariant or symmetric adjunctions on the left. is also a co-Galois connection.
- A closure system, , the closure range of the right adjoint (see below).
- An interior system, , the kernel range of the left adjoint (see below).
- A closure function [37] [suggest “closure operator”] , from P to the closure range , with adjoint inclusion map , where denotes the identity over P.
- A kernel function [37] [also “interior operator”, “kernel operator”] , from Q to the range of , with adjoint inclusion map , where denotes the identity over Q.
- a perfect adjunction , that is, a dual order isomorphism between the closure and kernel ranges and .

- if form a left adjunction, then is residuated, preserves existing least upper bounds (for lattices, joins) and preserves existing greatest lower bounds (for lattices, meets).
- if form a Galois connection, then both and invert existing least upper bounds (for lattices, they transform joins into meets).
- if form a right Galois connection, then preserves existing greatest lower bounds (meets for lattices) and is residuated, preserves existing least upper bounds (joins for lattices).
- if form a co-Galois connection, then both an invert existing greatest lower bounds (for lattices, they transform meets into joins).
| Left Adjunction (type oo): | Galois Connection (type oi): |
|---|---|
| and | and |
| and | and |
| monotone, residuated | antitone |
| monotone, residual | antitone |
| join-preserving, meet-preserving | join-inverting, join-inverting |
| co-Galois connection (type io): | Right Adjunction (type ii): |
| and | and |
| and | and |
| antitone | monotone, residual |
| antitone | monotone, residuated |
| meet-inverting, meet-inverting | meet-preserving, join-preserving |
A Naming Convention for Galois Connections
- We take the type oo Galois connection to be a basic adjunction composed with an even number of anti-isomorphism on the domain and range orders.
- To obtain a type oi Galois connection compose a basic adjunction with an odd number of anti-isomorphism on the range.
- To get a a type io Galois connection we compose a basic adjunction with an odd number of anti-isomorphisms on the domain.
- Finally, a type ii Galois connection, is a basic adjunction with an odd number of anti-isomorphisms composed on both the domain and range.
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| Type of Fixpoint | with Bias in | with Bias in |
|---|---|---|
| extent | ||
| intent | ||
| co-extent | ||
| co-intent |
| Special Element | Bias in | Bias in |
|---|---|---|
| top | ||
| meet dense | ||
| join dense | ||
| bottom |
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Valverde-Albacete, F.J.; Peláez-Moreno, C. Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis Based on Complete Idempotent Semifields. Mathematics 2021, 9, 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9020173
Valverde-Albacete FJ, Peláez-Moreno C. Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis Based on Complete Idempotent Semifields. Mathematics. 2021; 9(2):173. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9020173
Chicago/Turabian StyleValverde-Albacete, Francisco José, and Carmen Peláez-Moreno. 2021. "Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis Based on Complete Idempotent Semifields" Mathematics 9, no. 2: 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9020173
APA StyleValverde-Albacete, F. J., & Peláez-Moreno, C. (2021). Four-Fold Formal Concept Analysis Based on Complete Idempotent Semifields. Mathematics, 9(2), 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9020173
