DATA MINING
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
Major issues in data mining
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Motivation: Necessity is the
Mother of Invention
Data explosion problem
Automated data collection tools and mature database
technology lead to tremendous amounts of data stored in
databases, data warehouses and other information
repositories
We are drowning in data, but starving for knowledge!
Solution: Data warehousing and data mining
Data warehousing and on-line analytical processing
Extraction of interesting knowledge (rules, regularities,
patterns, constraints) from data in large databases
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Evolution of Database
Technology
(See Fig. 1.1)
1960s:
1970s:
Relational data model, relational DBMS implementation
1980s:
Data collection, database creation, IMS and network DBMS
RDBMS, advanced data models (extended-relational, OO,
deductive, etc.) and application-oriented DBMS (spatial,
scientific, engineering, etc.)
1990s2000s:
May 14, 2015
Data mining and data warehousing, multimedia databases,
and Web databases
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
What Is Data Mining?
Data mining (knowledge discovery in databases):
Alternative names and their inside stories:
Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit, previously
unknown and potentially useful) information or patterns
from data in large databases
Data mining: a misnomer?
Knowledge discovery(mining) in databases (KDD),
knowledge extraction, data/pattern analysis, data
archeology, data dredging, information harvesting,
business intelligence, etc.
What is not data mining?
May 14, 2015
(Deductive) query processing.
Expert systems or small ML/statistical programs
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Why Data Mining? Potential
Applications
Database analysis and decision support
Market analysis and management
Risk analysis and management
target marketing, customer relation management,
market basket analysis, cross selling, market
segmentation
Forecasting, customer retention, improved
underwriting, quality control, competitive analysis
Fraud detection and management
Other Applications
Text mining (news group, email, documents) and Web analysis.
Intelligent query answering
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Market Analysis and
Management (1)
Where are the data sources for analysis?
Target marketing
Find clusters of model customers who share the same
characteristics: interest, income level, spending habits, etc.
Determine customer purchasing patterns over time
Credit card transactions, loyalty cards, discount coupons,
customer complaint calls, plus (public) lifestyle studies
Conversion of single to a joint bank account: marriage, etc.
Cross-market analysis
Associations/co-relations between product sales
Prediction based on the association information
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Market Analysis and
Management (2)
Customer profiling
data mining can tell you what types of customers buy what
products (clustering or classification)
Identifying customer requirements
identifying the best products for different customers
use prediction to find what factors will attract new
customers
Provides summary information
various multidimensional summary reports
statistical summary information (data central tendency and
variation)
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Corporate Analysis and Risk
Management
Finance planning and asset evaluation
Resource planning:
cash flow analysis and prediction
contingent claim analysis to evaluate assets
cross-sectional and time series analysis (financial-ratio,
trend analysis, etc.)
summarize and compare the resources and spending
Competition:
May 14, 2015
monitor competitors and market directions
group customers into classes and a class-based pricing
procedure
set pricing strategy in a highly competitive market
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Fraud Detection and
Management (1)
Applications
Approach
widely used in health care, retail, credit card services,
telecommunications (phone card fraud), etc.
use historical data to build models of fraudulent behavior
and use data mining to help identify similar instances
Examples
May 14, 2015
auto insurance: detect a group of people who stage
accidents to collect on insurance
money laundering: detect suspicious money transactions
(US Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network)
medical insurance: detect professional patients and ring
of doctors and ring of references
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Fraud Detection and
Management (2)
Detecting inappropriate medical treatment
Detecting telephone fraud
Australian Health Insurance Commission identifies that
in many cases blanket screening tests were requested
(save Australian $1m/yr).
Telephone call model: destination of the call, duration,
time of day or week. Analyze patterns that deviate from
an expected norm.
British Telecom identified discrete groups of callers with
frequent intra-group calls, especially mobile phones, and
broke a multimillion dollar fraud.
Retail
May 14, 2015
Analysts estimate that 38% of retail shrink is due to
dishonest employees.
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
10
Other Applications
Sports
Astronomy
IBM Advanced Scout analyzed NBA game statistics (shots
blocked, assists, and fouls) to gain competitive advantage
for New York Knicks and Miami Heat
JPL and the Palomar Observatory discovered 22 quasars
with the help of data mining
Internet Web Surf-Aid
May 14, 2015
IBM Surf-Aid applies data mining algorithms to Web
access logs for market-related pages to discover
customer preference and behavior pages, analyzing
effectiveness of Web marketing, improving Web site
organization, etc.
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
11
Data Mining: A KDD Process
Pattern Evaluation
Data mining: the core
of knowledge
Data Mining
discovery process.
Task-relevant Data
Data Warehouse
Selection
Data Cleaning
Data Integration
Databases
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
12
Steps of a KDD Process
Learning the application domain:
Creating a target data set: data selection
Data cleaning and preprocessing: (may take 60% of effort!)
Data reduction and transformation:
summarization, classification, regression, association,
clustering.
Choosing the mining algorithm(s)
Data mining: search for patterns of interest
Pattern evaluation and knowledge presentation
Find useful features, dimensionality/variable reduction,
invariant representation.
Choosing functions of data mining
relevant prior knowledge and goals of application
visualization, transformation, removing redundant patterns, etc.
Use of discovered knowledge
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
13
Data Mining and Business
Intelligence
Increasing potential
to support
business decisions
Making
Decisions
Data Presentation
Visualization Techniques
Data Mining
Information Discovery
End User
Business
Analyst
Data
Analyst
Data Exploration
Statistical Analysis, Querying and Reporting
Data Warehouses / Data Marts
OLAP, MDA
Data Sources
Paper, Files, Information Providers, Database Systems, OLTP
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
DBA
14
Architecture of a Typical
Data Mining System
Graphical user interface
Pattern evaluation
Data mining engine
Database or
data warehouse
Filtering
Data cleaning & data
integration
server
Databases
May 14, 2015
Knowledgebase
Data
Warehouse
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
15
Data Mining: On What Kind
of Data?
Relational databases
Data warehouses
Transactional databases
Advanced DB and information repositories
May 14, 2015
Object-oriented and object-relational databases
Spatial databases
Time-series data and temporal data
Text databases and multimedia databases
Heterogeneous and legacy databases
WWW
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
16
Data Mining Functionalities
(1)
Concept description: Characterization and
discrimination
Generalize, summarize, and contrast data
characteristics, e.g., dry vs. wet regions
Association (correlation and causality)
Multi-dimensional vs. single-dimensional association
age(X, 20..29) ^ income(X, 20..29K) buys(X,
PC) [support = 2%, confidence = 60%]
contains(T, computer) contains(x, software)
[1%, 75%]
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
17
Data Mining Functionalities
(2)
Classification and Prediction
Finding 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
Presentation: decision-tree, classification rule, neural
network
Prediction: Predict some unknown or missing numerical
values
Cluster analysis
Class label is unknown: Group data to form new classes, e.g.,
cluster houses to find distribution patterns
Clustering based on the principle: maximizing the intra-class
Data Mining: Concepts and
similarity
and
minimizing
the interclass similarity
May 14, 2015
Techniques
18
Data Mining Functionalities
(3)
Outlier analysis
Outlier: a data object that does not comply with the general
behavior of the data
It can be considered as noise or exception but is quite useful
in fraud detection, rare events analysis
Trend and evolution analysis
Trend and deviation: regression analysis
Sequential pattern mining, periodicity analysis
Similarity-based analysis
Other pattern-directed or statistical analyses
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
19
Are All the Discovered
Patterns Interesting?
A data mining system/query 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 users belief in the data, e.g., unexpectedness,
novelty, actionability, etc.
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
20
Can We Find All and Only
Interesting Patterns?
Find all the interesting patterns: Completeness
Can a data mining system find all the interesting patterns?
Association vs. classification vs. clustering
Search for only interesting patterns: Optimization
Can a data mining system find only the interesting patterns?
Approaches
May 14, 2015
First general all the patterns and then filter out the
uninteresting ones.
Generate only the interesting patternsmining query
optimization
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
21
Data Mining: Confluence of
Multiple Disciplines
Database
Technology
Machine
Learning
Information
Science
May 14, 2015
Statistics
Data Mining
Visualization
Other
Disciplines
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
22
Data Mining: Classification
Schemes
May 14, 2015
General functionality
Descriptive data mining
Predictive data mining
Different views, different classifications
Kinds of databases to be mined
Kinds of knowledge to be discovered
Kinds of techniques utilized
Kinds of applications adapted
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
23
A Multi-Dimensional View of
Data Mining Classification
Databases to be mined
Relational, transactional, object-oriented, object-relational,
active, spatial, time-series, text, multi-media,
heterogeneous, legacy, WWW, etc.
Knowledge to be mined
Characterization, discrimination, association, classification,
clustering, trend, deviation and outlier analysis, etc.
Multiple/integrated functions and mining at multiple levels
Techniques utilized
Database-oriented, data warehouse (OLAP), machine
learning, statistics, visualization, neural network, etc.
Applications adapted
May 14, 2015
Retail, telecommunication, banking, fraud analysis, DNA mining,
stock market analysis, Web mining, Weblog analysis, etc.
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
24
OLAP Mining: An Integration of
Data Mining and Data
Warehousing
Data mining systems, DBMS, Data warehouse
systems coupling
On-line analytical mining data
integration of mining and OLAP technologies
Interactive mining multi-level knowledge
No coupling, loose-coupling, semi-tight-coupling, tight-coupling
Necessity of mining knowledge and patterns at different levels
of abstraction by drilling/rolling, pivoting, slicing/dicing, etc.
Integration of multiple mining functions
Characterized classification, first clustering and then
association
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
25
An OLAM Architecture
Mining query
Mining result
Layer4
User Interface
User GUI API
OLAM
Engine
OLAP
Engine
Layer3
OLAP/OLAM
Data Cube API
Layer2
MDDB
Filtering&Integration
MDDB
Database API
Meta
Data
Filtering
Layer1
Databases
May 14, 2015
Data cleaning
Data
Warehouse
Data integration
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
Data
Repository
26
Major Issues in Data Mining
(1)
Mining methodology and user interaction
Mining different kinds of knowledge in databases
Interactive mining of knowledge at multiple levels of
abstraction
Incorporation of background knowledge
Data mining query languages and ad-hoc data mining
Expression and visualization of data mining results
Handling noise and incomplete data
Pattern evaluation: the interestingness problem
Performance and scalability
Efficiency and scalability of data mining algorithms
Parallel, distributed and
mining methods
Data incremental
Mining: Concepts and
May 14, 2015
Techniques
27
Major Issues in Data Mining (2)
Issues relating to the diversity of data types
Handling relational and complex types of data
Mining information from heterogeneous databases and
global information systems (WWW)
Issues related to applications and social impacts
Application of discovered knowledge
Domain-specific data mining tools
Intelligent query answering
Process control and decision making
Integration of the discovered knowledge with existing
knowledge: A knowledge fusion problem
Protection of data security, integrity, and privacy
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
28
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
Mining can be performed in a variety of information repositories
Data mining functionalities: characterization, discrimination,
association, classification, clustering, outlier and trend analysis,
etc.
Classification of data mining systems
Major issues in data mining
May 14, 2015
Data Mining: Concepts and
Techniques
29