Data Mining:
Concepts and Techniques
— Chapter 1 —
— Introduction —
SURESH BABU M
ASST PROF
IT DEPT
VJIT
1 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Chapter 1. Introduction
Motivation: Why data mining?
What is data mining?
Data Mining: On what kind of data?
Data mining functionality
Are all the patterns interesting?
Classification of data mining systems
Data Mining Task Primitives
Integration of data mining system with a DB and DW System
Major issues in data mining
2 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Why Data Mining?
The Explosive Growth of Data: from terabytes to petabytes
Data collection and data availability
Automated data collection tools, database systems, Web, computerized society
Major sources of abundant data
Business: Web, e-commerce, transactions, stocks, …
Science: Remote sensing, bioinformatics, scientific simulation, …
Society and everyone: news, digital cameras,
We are drowning in data, but starving for knowledge!
“Necessity is the mother of invention”—Data mining—Automated analysis of massive
data sets
3 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Evolution of Database Technology
1960s:
Data collection, database creation, IMS and network DBMS
1970s:
Relational data model, relational DBMS implementation
1980s:
RDBMS, advanced data models (extended-relational, OO, deductive, etc.)
Application-oriented DBMS (spatial, scientific, engineering, etc.)
1990s:
Data mining, data warehousing, multimedia databases, and Web databases
2000s
Stream data management and mining
Data mining and its applications
Web technology (XML, data integration) and global information systems
4 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
What Is Data Mining?
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?
Knowledge mining from data
Alternative names
Knowledge discovery (mining) in databases (KDD), knowledge
extraction, data/pattern analysis, data archeology, business
intelligence, etc.
5 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Why Data Mining?—Potential Applications
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) andWeb mining
Stream data mining
Bioinformatics and bio-data analysis
6 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Ex. 1: Market Analysis and Management
Where does the data come from?—Credit card transactions, loyalty cards, discount coupons,
customer complaint calls, plus (public) lifestyle studies
Target marketing
Find clusters of “model” customers who share the same characteristics: interest, income level, spending
habits, etc.,
Determine customer purchasing patterns over time
Cross-market analysis—Find associations/co-relations between product sales, & predict based
on such association
Customer profiling—What types of customers buy what products (clustering or classification)
Customer requirement analysis
Identify the best products for different customers
Predict what factors will attract new customers
Provision of summary information
Multidimensional summary reports
Statistical summary information (data central tendency and variation)
7 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Ex. 2: Corporate Analysis & Risk Management
Finance planning and asset evaluation
cash flow analysis and prediction
contingent claim analysis to evaluate assets
cross-sectional and time series analysis (financial-ratio, trend analysis, etc.)
Resource planning
summarize and compare the resources and spending
Competition
monitor competitors and market directions
group customers into classes and a class-based pricing procedure
set pricing strategy in a highly competitive market
8 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Ex. 3: Fraud Detection & Mining Unusual Patterns
Approaches: Clustering & model construction for frauds, outlier analysis
Applications: Health care, retail, credit card service, telecomm.
Auto insurance: ring of collisions
Money laundering: suspicious monetary transactions
Medical insurance
Professional patients, ring of doctors, and ring of references
Unnecessary or correlated screening tests
Telecommunications: phone-call fraud
Phone call model: destination of the call, duration, time of day or week. Analyze patterns
that deviate from an expected norm
Retail industry
Analysts estimate that 38% of retail shrink is due to dishonest employees
Anti-terrorism
9 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Knowledge Discovery (KDD) Process
Data mining—core of knowledge
Pattern Evaluation
discovery process
Data Mining
Task-relevant Data
Data Warehouse Selection
Data Cleaning
Data Integration
10 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Databases
KDD Process: Several Key Steps
Learning the application domain
relevant prior knowledge and goals of application
Creating a target data set: data selection
Data cleaning and preprocessing: (may take 60% of effort!)
Data reduction and transformation
Find useful features, dimensionality/variable reduction, invariant representation
Choosing functions of data mining
summarization, classification, regression, association, clustering
Choosing the mining algorithm(s)
Data mining: search for patterns of interest
Pattern evaluation and knowledge presentation
visualization, transformation, removing redundant patterns, etc.
Use of discovered knowledge
11 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining and Business Intelligence
Increasing potential
to support
business decisions End User
Decision
Making
Data Presentation Business
Analyst
Visualization Techniques
Data Mining Data
Information Discovery Analyst
Data Exploration
Statistical Summary, Querying, and Reporting
Data Preprocessing/Integration, Data Warehouses
DBA
Data Sources
Paper, Files, Web documents, Scientific experiments, Database Systems
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
12
Why Not Traditional Data Analysis?
Tremendous amount of data
Algorithms must be highly scalable to handle such as tera-bytes of data
High-dimensionality of data
Micro-array may have tens of thousands of dimensions
High complexity of data
Data streams and sensor data
Time-series data, temporal data, sequence data
Structure data, graphs, social networks and multi-linked data
Heterogeneous databases and legacy databases
Spatial, spatiotemporal, multimedia, text and Web data
Software programs, scientific simulations
New and sophisticated applications
13 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining: On What Kinds of Data?
Database-oriented data sets and applications
Relational database, data warehouse, transactional database
Advanced data sets and advanced applications
Data streams and sensor data
Time-series data, temporal data, sequence data (incl. bio-sequences)
Structure data, graphs, social networks and multi-linked data
Object-relational databases
Heterogeneous databases and legacy databases
Spatial data and spatiotemporal data
Multimedia database
Text databases
The World-Wide Web
14 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining Functionalities
Multidimensional concept description: Characterization and discrimination
Generalize, summarize, and contrast data characteristics, e.g., dry vs. wet regions
Frequent patterns, association, correlation vs. causality
Diaper Beer [0.5%, 75%] (Correlation or causality?)
Classification and prediction
Construct models (functions) that describe and distinguish classes or concepts for
future prediction
E.g., classify countries based on (climate), or classify cars based on (gas mileage)
Predict some unknown or missing numerical values
15 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Data Mining Functionalities (2)
Cluster analysis
Class label is unknown: Group data to form new classes, e.g., cluster houses to find
distribution patterns
Maximizing intra-class similarity & minimizing interclass similarity
Outlier analysis
Outlier: Data object that does not comply with the general behavior of the data
Noise or exception? Useful in fraud detection, rare events analysis
Trend and evolution analysis
Trend and deviation: e.g., regression analysis
Sequential pattern mining: e.g., digital camera large SD memory
Periodicity analysis
Similarity-based analysis
Other pattern-directed or statistical analyses
16 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Are All the “Discovered” Patterns Interesting?
Data mining may generate thousands of patterns: Not all of them are interesting
Suggested approach: Human-centered, query-based, focused mining
Interestingness measures
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, or validates some hypothesis that a user
seeks to confirm
Objective vs. subjective interestingness measures
Objective: based on statistics and structures of patterns, e.g., support, confidence, etc.
Subjective: based on user’s belief in the data, e.g., unexpectedness, novelty, actionability, etc.
17 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Architecture: Typical Data Mining System
Graphical User Interface
Pattern Evaluation
Knowl
Data Mining Engine edge-
Base
Database or Data
Warehouse Server
data cleaning, integration, and selection
Data World-Wide Other Info
Database Repositories
Warehouse Web
18 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Major Issues in Data Mining
Mining methodology
Mining different kinds of knowledge from diverse data types, e.g., bio, stream, Web
Performance: efficiency, effectiveness, and scalability
Pattern evaluation: the interestingness problem
Incorporation of background knowledge
Handling noise and incomplete data
Parallel, distributed and incremental mining methods
Integration of the discovered knowledge with existing one: knowledge fusion
User interaction
Data mining query languages and ad-hoc mining
Expression and visualization of data mining results
Interactive mining of knowledge at multiple levels of abstraction
Applications and social impacts
Protection of data security, integrity, and privacy
19 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Summary
Data mining: Discovering interesting patterns from large amounts of data
A natural evolution of database technology, in great demand, with wide applications
A KDD process includes data cleaning, data integration, data selection, transformation,
data mining, pattern evaluation, and knowledge presentation
Data mining functionalities: characterization, discrimination, association, classification,
clustering, outlier and trend analysis, etc.
Data mining systems and architectures
Major issues in data mining
20 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Conferences and Journals on Data Mining
KDD Conferences Other related conferences
ACM SIGKDD Int. Conf. on ACM SIGMOD
Knowledge Discovery in Databases and
VLDB
Data Mining (KDD)
SIAM Data Mining Conf. (SDM) (IEEE) ICDE
(IEEE) Int. Conf. on Data Mining WWW, SIGIR
(ICDM) ICML, CVPR, NIPS
Conf. on Principles and practices of
Journals
Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
(PKDD) Data Mining and Knowledge
Pacific-Asia Conf. on Knowledge Discovery (DAMI or DMKD)
Discovery and Data Mining (PAKDD) IEEE Trans. On Knowledge
and Data Eng. (TKDE)
KDD Explorations
ACM Trans. on KDD
21 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
Recommended Reference Books
S. Chakrabarti. Mining the Web: Statistical Analysis of Hypertex and Semi-Structured Data. Morgan Kaufmann, 2002
R. O. Duda, P. E. Hart, and D. G. Stork, Pattern Classification, 2ed., Wiley-Interscience, 2000
T. Dasu and T. Johnson. Exploratory Data Mining and Data Cleaning. John Wiley & Sons, 2003
U. M. Fayyad, G. Piatetsky-Shapiro, P. Smyth, and R. Uthurusamy. Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining. AAAI/MIT Press, 1996
U. Fayyad, G. Grinstein, and A. Wierse, Information Visualization in Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, Morgan Kaufmann, 2001
J. Han and M. Kamber. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques. Morgan Kaufmann, 2nd ed., 2006
D. J. Hand, H. Mannila, and P. Smyth, Principles of Data Mining, MIT Press, 2001
T. Hastie, R. Tibshirani, and J. Friedman, The Elements of Statistical Learning: Data Mining, Inference, and Prediction,
Springer-Verlag, 2001
T. M. Mitchell, Machine Learning, McGraw Hill, 1997
G. Piatetsky-Shapiro and W. J. Frawley. Knowledge Discovery in Databases. AAAI/MIT Press, 1991
P.-N. Tan, M. Steinbach and V. Kumar, Introduction to Data Mining, Wiley, 2005
S. M. Weiss and N. Indurkhya, Predictive Data Mining, Morgan Kaufmann, 1998
I. H. Witten and E. Frank, Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques with Java Implementations, Morgan
Kaufmann, 2nd ed. 2005
22 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques