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Lingma Acheson
Department of Computer and Information Science, IUPUI
linglu@iupui.edu
• 1.1 Motivation: Why data mining?
• 1.2 What is data mining?
• 1.3 Data Mining: On what kind of data?
• 1.4 Data mining functionality: What kinds of Patterns Can Be Mined?
• 1.5 Are all the patterns interesting?
• 1.6 Classification of data mining systems
• 1.7 Data Mining Task Primitives
• 1.8 Integration of data mining system with a DB and DW System
• 1.9 Major issues in data mining
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
• The Explosive Growth of Data: from terabytes(10004) to yottabytes(10008)
– Data collection and data availability
• Automated data collection tools, database systems, web
– Major sources of abundant data
• Business: Web, e-commerce, transactions, stocks, …
• Science: bioinformatics, scientific simulation, medical research …
• Society and everyone: news, digital cameras, …
• Data rich but information poor!
– What does those data mean?
– How to analyze data?
• Data mining — Automated analysis of massive data sets
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
chap1.ppt
5
• Data mining (knowledge discovery from data)
– Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit, previously unknown
and potentially useful) patterns or knowledge from huge amount
of data
– Data mining: a misnomer?
• Alternative names
– Knowledge discovery (mining) in databases (KDD), knowledge
extraction, data/pattern analysis, data archeology, data dredging,
information harvesting, business intelligence, etc.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
• Data analysis and decision support
– Market analysis and management
• Target marketing, customer relationship management (CRM),
market basket analysis, cross selling, market segmentation
– Risk analysis and management
• Forecasting, customer retention, improved underwriting, quality
control, competitive analysis
– Fraud detection and detection of unusual patterns (outliers)
• Other Applications
– Text mining (news group, email, documents) and Web mining
– Stream data mining
– Bioinformatics and bio-data analysis
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
7
• Where does the data come from?—Credit card transactions, loyalty cards,
discount coupons, customer complaint calls, surveys …
• Target marketing
– Find clusters of “model” customers who share the same characteristics: interest,
income level, spending habits, etc.,
• E.g. Most customers with income level 60k – 80k with food expenses $600 - $800 a month live in that area
– Determine customer purchasing patterns over time
• E.g. Customers who are between 20 and 29 years old, with income of 20k – 29k usually buy this type of
CD player
• Cross-market analysis—Find associations/co-relations between product sales, &
predict based on such association
– E.g. Customers who buy computer A usually buy software B
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
8
• Customer requirement analysis
– Identify the best products for different customers
– Predict what factors will attract new customers
• Provision of summary information
– Multidimensional summary reports
• E.g. Summarize all transactions of the first quarter from three different branches
Summarize all transactions of last year from a particular branch
Summarize all transactions of a particular product
– Statistical summary information
• E.g. What is the average age for customers who buy product A?
• Fraud detection
– Find outliers of unusual transactions
• Financial planning
– Summarize and compare the resources and spending
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 10
• Learning the application domain
– relevant prior knowledge and goals of application
• Identifying a target data set: data selection
• Data processing
– Data cleaning (remove noise and inconsistent data)
– Data integration (multiple data sources maybe combined)
– Data selection (data relevant to the analysis task are retrieved from database)
– Data transformation (data transformed or consolidated into forms appropriate for
mining)
(Done with data preprocessing)
– Data mining (an essential process where intelligent methods are applied to extract
data patterns)
– Pattern evaluation (indentify the truly interesting patterns)
– Knowledge presentation (mined knowledge is presented to the user with
visualization or representation techniques)
• Use of discovered knowledge
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 11
Increasing potential
to support
business decisions End User
Business
Analyst
Data
Analyst
DBA
Decision
Making
Data Presentation
Visualization Techniques
Data Mining
Information Discovery
Data Exploration
Statistical Summary, Querying, and Reporting
Data Preprocessing/Integration, Data Warehouses
Data Sources
Paper, Files, Web documents, Scientific experiments, Database Systems
• Database, data warehouse, WWW or other information
repository (store data)
• Database or data warehouse server (fetch and
combine data)
• Knowledge base (turn data into meaningful groups
according to domain knowledge)
• Data mining engine (perform mining tasks)
• Pattern evaluation module (find interesting patterns)
• User interface (interact with the user)
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
chap1.ppt
14
Data Mining
Database
Technology Statistics
Information
Science
Other
Disciplines
Visualization
Machine
Learning
• Not all “Data Mining System” performs true data mining
 machine learning system, statistical analysis (small amount of data)
 Database system (information retrieval, deductive querying…)
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 15
• Database-oriented data sets and applications
– Relational database, data warehouse, transactional database
• Advanced data sets and advanced applications
– Object-Relational Databases
– Temporal Databases, Sequence Databases, Time-Series databases
– Spatial Databases and Spatiotemporal Databases
– Text databases and Multimedia databases
– Heterogeneous Databases and Legacy Databases
– Data Streams
– The World-Wide Web
• DBMS – database management system, contains a collection of
interrelated databases
e.g. Faculty database, student database, publications database
• Each database contains a collection of tables and functions to
manage and access the data.
e.g. student_bio, student_graduation, student_parking
• Each table contains columns and rows, with columns as attributes of
data and rows as records.
• Tables can be used to represent the relationships between or among
multiple tables.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
• With a relational query language, e.g. SQL, we will be able to find
answers to questions such as:
– How many items were sold last year?
– Who has earned commissions higher than 10%?
– What is the total sales of last month for Dell laptops?
• When data mining is applied to relational databases, we can search
for trends or data patterns.
• Relational databases are one of the most commonly available and
rich information repositories, and thus are a major data form in our
study.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
• A repository of information collected from multiple sources, stored
under a unified schema, and that usually resides at a single site.
• Constructed via a process of data cleaning, data integration, data
transformation, data loading and periodic data refreshing.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
• Data are organized around major subjects, e.g. customer, item, sup
plier and activity.
• Provide information from a historical perspective (e.g. from the past
5 – 10 years)
• Typically summarized to a higher level (e.g. a summary of the
transactions per item type for each store)
• User can perform drill-down or roll-up operation to view the data at
different degrees of summarization
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
chap1.ppt
• Consists of a file where each record represents a transaction
• A transaction typically includes a unique transaction ID and a list of
the items making up the transaction.
• Either stored in a flat file or unfolded into relational tables
• Easy to identify items that are frequently sold together
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 23
• Concept/Class Description: Characterization and Discriminati
on
– Data can be associated with classes or concepts.
• E.g. classes of items – computers, printers, …
concepts of customers – bigSpenders, budgetSpenders, …
• How to describe these items or concepts?
– Descriptions can be derived via
• Data characterization – summarizing the general characteristics of a
target class of data.
– E.g. summarizing the characteristics of customers who spend more than $1,000 a year
at AllElectronics. Result can be a general profile of the customers, such as 40 – 50 years
old, employed, have excellent credit ratings.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 24
• Data discrimination – comparing the target class with one or a set of
comparative classes
– E.g. Compare the general features of software products whole sales increase by 10% in
the last year with those whose sales decrease by 30% during the same period
• Or both of the above
• Mining Frequent Patterns, Associations and
Correlations
– Frequent itemset: a set of items that frequently appear
together in a transactional data set (e.g. milk and bread)
– Frequent subsequence: a pattern that customers tend to purchase pr
oduct A, followed by a purchase of product B
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 25
– Association Analysis: find frequent patterns
• E.g. a sample analysis result – an association rule:
buys(X, “computer”) => buys(X, “software”) [support = 1%, confidence = 50%]
(if a customer buys a computer, there is a 50% chance that she will buy software.
1% of all of the transactions under analysis showed that computer and software
are purchased together. )
• Associations rules are discarded as uninteresting if they do not satisfy both a mini
mum support threshold and a minimum confidence threshold.
– Correlation Analysis: additional analysis to find statistical correlations
between associated pairs
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 26
• Classification and Prediction
– Classification
• The process of finding a model that describes and distinguishes the data classes or
concepts, for the purpose of being able to use the model to predict the class of
objects whose class label is unknown.
• The derived model is based on the analysis of a set of training data (data objects
whose class label is known).
• The model can be represented in classification (IF-THEN) rules, decision trees,
neural networks, etc.
– Prediction
• Predict missing or unavailable numerical data values
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 27
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 28
• Cluster Analysis
– Class label is unknown: group data to form new classes
– Clusters of objects are formed based on the principle of maximizing
intra-class similarity & minimizing interclass similarity
• E.g. Identify homogeneous subpopulations of customers. These clusters may
represent individual target groups for marketing.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 29
• Outlier Analysis
– Data that do no comply with the general behavior or model.
– Outliers are usually discarded as noise or exceptions.
– Useful for fraud detection.
• E.g. Detect purchases of extremely large amounts
• Evolution Analysis
– Describes and models regularities or trends for objects whose
behavior changes over time.
• E.g. Identify stock evolution regularities for overall stocks and for the stocks of
particular companies.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 30
• Data mining may generate thousands of patterns: Not all of them
are interesting
• A pattern is interesting if it is
– easily understood by humans
– valid on new or test data with some degree of certainty,
– potentially useful
– novel
– validates some hypothesis that a user seeks to confirm
• An interesting measure represents knowledge !
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 31
• Objective measures
– Based on statistics and structures of patterns, e.g., support, confidence, etc.
(Rules that do not satisfy a threshold are considered uninteresting.)
• Subjective measures
– Reflect the needs and interests of a particular user.
• E.g. A marketing manager is only interested in characteristics of customers who shop
frequently.
– Based on user’s belief in the data.
• e.g., Patterns are interesting if they are unexpected, or can be used for strategic planning, etc
• Objective and subjective measures need to be combined.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 32
• Find all the interesting patterns: Completeness
– Unrealistic and inefficient
– User-provided constraints and interestingness measures should be used
• Search for only interesting patterns: An optimization problem
– Highly desirable
– No need to search through the generated patterns to identify truly
interesting ones.
– Measures can be used to rank the discovered patterns according their
interestingness.
Data Mining
Database
Technology Statistics
Information
Science
Other
Disciplines
Visualization
Machine
Learning
• Database
– Relational, data warehouse, transactional, stream, object-oriented/relational,
active, spatial, time-series, text, multi-media, heterogeneous, legacy, WWW
• Knowledge
– Characterization, discrimination, association, classification, clustering, trend/
deviation, outlier analysis, etc.
– Multiple/integrated functions and mining at multiple levels
• Techniques utilized
– Database-oriented, data warehouse (OLAP), machine learning, statistics,
visualization, etc.
• Applications adapted
– Retail, telecommunication, banking, fraud analysis, bio-data mining, stock
market analysis, text mining, Web mining, etc.
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 35
• How to construct a data mining query?
– The primitives allow the user to interactively communicate with
the data mining system during discovery to direct the mining
process, or examine the findings
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 36
– The primitives specify:
(1) The set of task-relevant data – which portion of the database to be used
– Database or data warehouse name
– Database tables or data warehouse cubes
– Condition for data selection
– Relevant attributes or dimensions
– Data grouping criteria
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 37
– The primitives specify:
(2) The kind of knowledge to be mined – what DB functions to be performed
– Characterization
– Discrimination
– Association
– Classification/prediction
– Clustering
– Outlier analysis
– Other data mining tasks
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 38
(3) The background knowledge to be used – what domain knowledge,
concept hierarchies, etc.
(4) Interestingness measures and thresholds – support, confidence, etc.
(5) Visualization methods – what form to display the result, e.g. rules,
tables, charts, graphs, …
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 39
• DMQL – Data Mining Query Language
– Designed to incorporate these primitives
– Allow user to interact with DM systems
– Providing a standardized language like SQL
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 40
An Example Query in DMQL
(1)
(3)
(2)
(1)
(1)
(1)
(2)
(1)
(5)
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 41
• Automated vs. query-driven?
– Finding all the patterns autonomously in a database?—unrealistic
because the patterns could be too many but uninteresting
• Data mining should be an interactive process
– User directs what to be mined
• Users must be provided with a set of primitives to be used to
communicate with the data mining system
• Incorporating these primitives in a data mining query language
– More flexible user interaction
– Foundation for design of graphical user interface
– Standardization of data mining industry and practice
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 42
• No coupling
– Flat file processing, no utilization of any functions of a DB/DW
system
– Not recommended
• Loose coupling
– Fetching data from DB/DW
– Does not explore data structures and query optimization metho
ds provided by DB/DW system
– Difficult to achieve high scalability and good performance with
large data sets
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 43
• Semi-tight
– Efficient implementations of a few essential data mining primitives in
a DB/DW system are provided, e.g., sorting, indexing, aggregation,
histogram analysis, multiway join, precomputation of some stat
functions
– Enhanced DM performance
• Tight
– DM is smoothly integrated into a DB/DW system, mining query is
optimized based on mining query analysis, data structures, indexing,
query processing methods of a DB/DW system
– A uniform information processing environment, highly desirable
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 44
• Mining methodology and User interaction
– Mining different kinds of knowledge
• DM should cover a wide spectrum of data analysis and knowledge discovery tasks
• Enable to use the database in different ways
• Require the development of numerous data mining techniques
– Interactive mining of knowledge at multiple levels of abstraction
• Difficult to know exactly what will be discovered
• Allow users to focus the search, refine data mining requests
– Incorporation of background knowledge
• Guide the discovery process
• Allow discovered patterns to be expressed in concise terms and different levels of
abstraction
– Data mining query languages and ad hoc data mining
• High-level query languages need to be developed
• Should be integrated with a DB/DW query language
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 45
– Presentation and visualization of results
• Knowledge should be easily understood and directly usable
• High level languages, visual representations or other expressive forms
• Require the DM system to adopt the above techniques
– Handling noisy or incomplete data
• Require data cleaning methods and data analysis methods that can handle noise
– Pattern evaluation – the interestingness problem
• How to develop techniques to access the interestingness of discovered patterns, e
specially with subjective measures bases on user beliefs or expectations
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 46
• Performance Issues
– Efficiency and scalability
• Huge amount of data
• Running time must be predictable and acceptable
– Parallel, distributed and incremental mining algorithms
• Divide the data into partitions and processed in parallel
• Incorporate database updates without having to mine the entire data again from
scratch
• Diversity of Database Types
– Other database that contain complex data objects, multimedia data,
spatial data, etc.
– Expect to have different DM systems for different kinds of data
– Heterogeneous databases and global information systems
• Web mining becomes a very challenging and fast-evolving field in data mining

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chap1.ppt

  • 1. Lingma Acheson Department of Computer and Information Science, IUPUI linglu@iupui.edu
  • 2. • 1.1 Motivation: Why data mining? • 1.2 What is data mining? • 1.3 Data Mining: On what kind of data? • 1.4 Data mining functionality: What kinds of Patterns Can Be Mined? • 1.5 Are all the patterns interesting? • 1.6 Classification of data mining systems • 1.7 Data Mining Task Primitives • 1.8 Integration of data mining system with a DB and DW System • 1.9 Major issues in data mining Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 3. • The Explosive Growth of Data: from terabytes(10004) to yottabytes(10008) – Data collection and data availability • Automated data collection tools, database systems, web – Major sources of abundant data • Business: Web, e-commerce, transactions, stocks, … • Science: bioinformatics, scientific simulation, medical research … • Society and everyone: news, digital cameras, … • Data rich but information poor! – What does those data mean? – How to analyze data? • Data mining — Automated analysis of massive data sets Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 5. 5 • Data mining (knowledge discovery from data) – Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit, previously unknown and potentially useful) patterns or knowledge from huge amount of data – Data mining: a misnomer? • Alternative names – Knowledge discovery (mining) in databases (KDD), knowledge extraction, data/pattern analysis, data archeology, data dredging, information harvesting, business intelligence, etc. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 6. • Data analysis and decision support – Market analysis and management • Target marketing, customer relationship management (CRM), market basket analysis, cross selling, market segmentation – Risk analysis and management • Forecasting, customer retention, improved underwriting, quality control, competitive analysis – Fraud detection and detection of unusual patterns (outliers) • Other Applications – Text mining (news group, email, documents) and Web mining – Stream data mining – Bioinformatics and bio-data analysis Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 7. 7 • Where does the data come from?—Credit card transactions, loyalty cards, discount coupons, customer complaint calls, surveys … • Target marketing – Find clusters of “model” customers who share the same characteristics: interest, income level, spending habits, etc., • E.g. Most customers with income level 60k – 80k with food expenses $600 - $800 a month live in that area – Determine customer purchasing patterns over time • E.g. Customers who are between 20 and 29 years old, with income of 20k – 29k usually buy this type of CD player • Cross-market analysis—Find associations/co-relations between product sales, & predict based on such association – E.g. Customers who buy computer A usually buy software B Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 8. 8 • Customer requirement analysis – Identify the best products for different customers – Predict what factors will attract new customers • Provision of summary information – Multidimensional summary reports • E.g. Summarize all transactions of the first quarter from three different branches Summarize all transactions of last year from a particular branch Summarize all transactions of a particular product – Statistical summary information • E.g. What is the average age for customers who buy product A? • Fraud detection – Find outliers of unusual transactions • Financial planning – Summarize and compare the resources and spending Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 9. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 10. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 10 • Learning the application domain – relevant prior knowledge and goals of application • Identifying a target data set: data selection • Data processing – Data cleaning (remove noise and inconsistent data) – Data integration (multiple data sources maybe combined) – Data selection (data relevant to the analysis task are retrieved from database) – Data transformation (data transformed or consolidated into forms appropriate for mining) (Done with data preprocessing) – Data mining (an essential process where intelligent methods are applied to extract data patterns) – Pattern evaluation (indentify the truly interesting patterns) – Knowledge presentation (mined knowledge is presented to the user with visualization or representation techniques) • Use of discovered knowledge
  • 11. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 11 Increasing potential to support business decisions End User Business Analyst Data Analyst DBA Decision Making Data Presentation Visualization Techniques Data Mining Information Discovery Data Exploration Statistical Summary, Querying, and Reporting Data Preprocessing/Integration, Data Warehouses Data Sources Paper, Files, Web documents, Scientific experiments, Database Systems
  • 12. • Database, data warehouse, WWW or other information repository (store data) • Database or data warehouse server (fetch and combine data) • Knowledge base (turn data into meaningful groups according to domain knowledge) • Data mining engine (perform mining tasks) • Pattern evaluation module (find interesting patterns) • User interface (interact with the user) Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 14. 14 Data Mining Database Technology Statistics Information Science Other Disciplines Visualization Machine Learning • Not all “Data Mining System” performs true data mining  machine learning system, statistical analysis (small amount of data)  Database system (information retrieval, deductive querying…) Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 15. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 15 • Database-oriented data sets and applications – Relational database, data warehouse, transactional database • Advanced data sets and advanced applications – Object-Relational Databases – Temporal Databases, Sequence Databases, Time-Series databases – Spatial Databases and Spatiotemporal Databases – Text databases and Multimedia databases – Heterogeneous Databases and Legacy Databases – Data Streams – The World-Wide Web
  • 16. • DBMS – database management system, contains a collection of interrelated databases e.g. Faculty database, student database, publications database • Each database contains a collection of tables and functions to manage and access the data. e.g. student_bio, student_graduation, student_parking • Each table contains columns and rows, with columns as attributes of data and rows as records. • Tables can be used to represent the relationships between or among multiple tables. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 17. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 18. • With a relational query language, e.g. SQL, we will be able to find answers to questions such as: – How many items were sold last year? – Who has earned commissions higher than 10%? – What is the total sales of last month for Dell laptops? • When data mining is applied to relational databases, we can search for trends or data patterns. • Relational databases are one of the most commonly available and rich information repositories, and thus are a major data form in our study. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 19. • A repository of information collected from multiple sources, stored under a unified schema, and that usually resides at a single site. • Constructed via a process of data cleaning, data integration, data transformation, data loading and periodic data refreshing. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 20. • Data are organized around major subjects, e.g. customer, item, sup plier and activity. • Provide information from a historical perspective (e.g. from the past 5 – 10 years) • Typically summarized to a higher level (e.g. a summary of the transactions per item type for each store) • User can perform drill-down or roll-up operation to view the data at different degrees of summarization Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 22. • Consists of a file where each record represents a transaction • A transaction typically includes a unique transaction ID and a list of the items making up the transaction. • Either stored in a flat file or unfolded into relational tables • Easy to identify items that are frequently sold together Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
  • 23. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 23 • Concept/Class Description: Characterization and Discriminati on – Data can be associated with classes or concepts. • E.g. classes of items – computers, printers, … concepts of customers – bigSpenders, budgetSpenders, … • How to describe these items or concepts? – Descriptions can be derived via • Data characterization – summarizing the general characteristics of a target class of data. – E.g. summarizing the characteristics of customers who spend more than $1,000 a year at AllElectronics. Result can be a general profile of the customers, such as 40 – 50 years old, employed, have excellent credit ratings.
  • 24. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 24 • Data discrimination – comparing the target class with one or a set of comparative classes – E.g. Compare the general features of software products whole sales increase by 10% in the last year with those whose sales decrease by 30% during the same period • Or both of the above • Mining Frequent Patterns, Associations and Correlations – Frequent itemset: a set of items that frequently appear together in a transactional data set (e.g. milk and bread) – Frequent subsequence: a pattern that customers tend to purchase pr oduct A, followed by a purchase of product B
  • 25. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 25 – Association Analysis: find frequent patterns • E.g. a sample analysis result – an association rule: buys(X, “computer”) => buys(X, “software”) [support = 1%, confidence = 50%] (if a customer buys a computer, there is a 50% chance that she will buy software. 1% of all of the transactions under analysis showed that computer and software are purchased together. ) • Associations rules are discarded as uninteresting if they do not satisfy both a mini mum support threshold and a minimum confidence threshold. – Correlation Analysis: additional analysis to find statistical correlations between associated pairs
  • 26. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 26 • Classification and Prediction – Classification • The process of finding a model that describes and distinguishes the data classes or concepts, for the purpose of being able to use the model to predict the class of objects whose class label is unknown. • The derived model is based on the analysis of a set of training data (data objects whose class label is known). • The model can be represented in classification (IF-THEN) rules, decision trees, neural networks, etc. – Prediction • Predict missing or unavailable numerical data values
  • 27. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 27
  • 28. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 28 • Cluster Analysis – Class label is unknown: group data to form new classes – Clusters of objects are formed based on the principle of maximizing intra-class similarity & minimizing interclass similarity • E.g. Identify homogeneous subpopulations of customers. These clusters may represent individual target groups for marketing.
  • 29. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 29 • Outlier Analysis – Data that do no comply with the general behavior or model. – Outliers are usually discarded as noise or exceptions. – Useful for fraud detection. • E.g. Detect purchases of extremely large amounts • Evolution Analysis – Describes and models regularities or trends for objects whose behavior changes over time. • E.g. Identify stock evolution regularities for overall stocks and for the stocks of particular companies.
  • 30. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 30 • Data mining may generate thousands of patterns: Not all of them are interesting • A pattern is interesting if it is – easily understood by humans – valid on new or test data with some degree of certainty, – potentially useful – novel – validates some hypothesis that a user seeks to confirm • An interesting measure represents knowledge !
  • 31. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 31 • Objective measures – Based on statistics and structures of patterns, e.g., support, confidence, etc. (Rules that do not satisfy a threshold are considered uninteresting.) • Subjective measures – Reflect the needs and interests of a particular user. • E.g. A marketing manager is only interested in characteristics of customers who shop frequently. – Based on user’s belief in the data. • e.g., Patterns are interesting if they are unexpected, or can be used for strategic planning, etc • Objective and subjective measures need to be combined.
  • 32. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 32 • Find all the interesting patterns: Completeness – Unrealistic and inefficient – User-provided constraints and interestingness measures should be used • Search for only interesting patterns: An optimization problem – Highly desirable – No need to search through the generated patterns to identify truly interesting ones. – Measures can be used to rank the discovered patterns according their interestingness.
  • 34. • Database – Relational, data warehouse, transactional, stream, object-oriented/relational, active, spatial, time-series, text, multi-media, heterogeneous, legacy, WWW • Knowledge – Characterization, discrimination, association, classification, clustering, trend/ deviation, outlier analysis, etc. – Multiple/integrated functions and mining at multiple levels • Techniques utilized – Database-oriented, data warehouse (OLAP), machine learning, statistics, visualization, etc. • Applications adapted – Retail, telecommunication, banking, fraud analysis, bio-data mining, stock market analysis, text mining, Web mining, etc.
  • 35. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 35 • How to construct a data mining query? – The primitives allow the user to interactively communicate with the data mining system during discovery to direct the mining process, or examine the findings
  • 36. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 36 – The primitives specify: (1) The set of task-relevant data – which portion of the database to be used – Database or data warehouse name – Database tables or data warehouse cubes – Condition for data selection – Relevant attributes or dimensions – Data grouping criteria
  • 37. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 37 – The primitives specify: (2) The kind of knowledge to be mined – what DB functions to be performed – Characterization – Discrimination – Association – Classification/prediction – Clustering – Outlier analysis – Other data mining tasks
  • 38. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 38 (3) The background knowledge to be used – what domain knowledge, concept hierarchies, etc. (4) Interestingness measures and thresholds – support, confidence, etc. (5) Visualization methods – what form to display the result, e.g. rules, tables, charts, graphs, …
  • 39. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 39 • DMQL – Data Mining Query Language – Designed to incorporate these primitives – Allow user to interact with DM systems – Providing a standardized language like SQL
  • 40. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 40 An Example Query in DMQL (1) (3) (2) (1) (1) (1) (2) (1) (5)
  • 41. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 41 • Automated vs. query-driven? – Finding all the patterns autonomously in a database?—unrealistic because the patterns could be too many but uninteresting • Data mining should be an interactive process – User directs what to be mined • Users must be provided with a set of primitives to be used to communicate with the data mining system • Incorporating these primitives in a data mining query language – More flexible user interaction – Foundation for design of graphical user interface – Standardization of data mining industry and practice
  • 42. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 42 • No coupling – Flat file processing, no utilization of any functions of a DB/DW system – Not recommended • Loose coupling – Fetching data from DB/DW – Does not explore data structures and query optimization metho ds provided by DB/DW system – Difficult to achieve high scalability and good performance with large data sets
  • 43. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 43 • Semi-tight – Efficient implementations of a few essential data mining primitives in a DB/DW system are provided, e.g., sorting, indexing, aggregation, histogram analysis, multiway join, precomputation of some stat functions – Enhanced DM performance • Tight – DM is smoothly integrated into a DB/DW system, mining query is optimized based on mining query analysis, data structures, indexing, query processing methods of a DB/DW system – A uniform information processing environment, highly desirable
  • 44. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 44 • Mining methodology and User interaction – Mining different kinds of knowledge • DM should cover a wide spectrum of data analysis and knowledge discovery tasks • Enable to use the database in different ways • Require the development of numerous data mining techniques – Interactive mining of knowledge at multiple levels of abstraction • Difficult to know exactly what will be discovered • Allow users to focus the search, refine data mining requests – Incorporation of background knowledge • Guide the discovery process • Allow discovered patterns to be expressed in concise terms and different levels of abstraction – Data mining query languages and ad hoc data mining • High-level query languages need to be developed • Should be integrated with a DB/DW query language
  • 45. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 45 – Presentation and visualization of results • Knowledge should be easily understood and directly usable • High level languages, visual representations or other expressive forms • Require the DM system to adopt the above techniques – Handling noisy or incomplete data • Require data cleaning methods and data analysis methods that can handle noise – Pattern evaluation – the interestingness problem • How to develop techniques to access the interestingness of discovered patterns, e specially with subjective measures bases on user beliefs or expectations
  • 46. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 46 • Performance Issues – Efficiency and scalability • Huge amount of data • Running time must be predictable and acceptable – Parallel, distributed and incremental mining algorithms • Divide the data into partitions and processed in parallel • Incorporate database updates without having to mine the entire data again from scratch • Diversity of Database Types – Other database that contain complex data objects, multimedia data, spatial data, etc. – Expect to have different DM systems for different kinds of data – Heterogeneous databases and global information systems • Web mining becomes a very challenging and fast-evolving field in data mining