Please tell me what does the 2(in bold) in the below expression mean?
residsumsq = norm(y-yhat, 2 )^2;
Also, Is the norm function referring to summation? I read the documentation but it is not clear.

 채택된 답변

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson 2014년 2월 21일

0 개 추천

n = norm(X) returns the 2-norm of input X and is equivalent to norm(X,2). If X is a vector, this is equal to the Euclidean distance. If X is a matrix, this is equal to the largest singular value of X.
The 2-norm is equal to the Euclidean length of the vector.
So it norm(x) is norm(x,2) is sqrt(sum(x.^2))

추가 답변 (2개)

Bruno Pop-Stefanov
Bruno Pop-Stefanov 2014년 2월 21일

8 개 추천

The second input argument of the "norm" function specifies the order of the norm you would like to use. The default norm is the 2-norm, which is the Euclidean distance.
The p-norm is the p-th root of the sum of the terms elevated to the p-th power, i.e.:

댓글 수: 3

Thank you. So, is it ok to write this way
SS_res=(y-yhat,2)^2
No, it would be
SS_res = (y-yhat)^2
There would normally be a sqrt() around the sum() but you then square the result of the norm, so that cancels out the sqrt()
Priya
Priya 2014년 2월 21일
Ya, I understood now. Thanks very much for your help.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

dpb
dpb 2014년 2월 21일

0 개 추천

It's the order of the norm requested, in this case the "2-norm" which is the same thing as the Euclidean norm...

카테고리

질문:

2014년 2월 21일

댓글:

2014년 2월 21일

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by