As data acquisition technologies advance, longitudinal analysis is facing challenges of exploring complex feature patterns from high-dimensional data and modeling potential temporally lagged effects of features on a response. We propose a tensor-based model to analyze multidimensional data. It simultaneously discovers patterns in features and reveals whether features observed at past time points have impact on current outcomes. The model coefficient, a k-mode tensor, is decomposed into a summation of k tensors of the same dimension. We introduce a so-called latent F-1 norm that can be applied to the coefficient tensor to performed structured selection of features. Specifically, features will be selected along each mode of the tensor. The proposed model takes into account within-subject correlations by employing a tensor-based quadratic inference function. An asymptotic analysis shows that our model can identify true support when the sample size approaches to infinity. To solve the corresponding optimization problem, we develop a linearized block coordinate descent algorithm and prove its convergence for a fixed sample size. Computational results on synthetic datasets and real-life fMRI and EEG datasets demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed approach over existing techniques.
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