|
|
|
|
|
by wmsiler
3868 days ago
|
|
The barcode is not usually showing the zeroth Betti numbers. It's usually showing the first Betti number, which intuitively counts the 1-dimensional holes in the space. For each radius, there could be lots of those (imagine several circles that all have a single point in common, then the first Betti number will be equal to the number of circles). At a given radius, there will be one bar over it for each 1-dimensional hole. If a bar is really long, i.e. the same hole exists for many radii, then we assume that it must represent actual structure in the data, rather than just noise. You could do a barcode for the holes of any fixed dimension, but as you point out, the 0-th dimension case is relatively uninteresting, and as you get to higher dimensions, it's harder to visualize and interpret what is going on. So dimension 1 is most common. |
|
> the 0-th dimension case is relatively uninteresting
It was explained to me that the zeroth order Betti numbers have applications for clustering.