Data Mining:
Concepts and Techniques
Jiawei Han and Micheline Kamber
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 1
Chapter 1. Introduction
Motivation: Why data mining?
What is data mining?
Data Mining: On what kind of data?
Data mining functionality
Classification of data mining systems
Top-10 most popular data mining algorithms
Major issues in data mining
Overview of the course
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 2
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, YouTube
We are drowning in data, but starving for knowledge!
“Necessity is the mother of invention”—Data mining—Automated
analysis of massive data sets
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 3
Evolution of Sciences
Before 1600, empirical science
1600-1950s, theoretical science
Each discipline has grown a theoretical component. Theoretical models often
motivate experiments and generalize our understanding.
1950s-1990s, computational science
Over the last 50 years, most disciplines have grown a third, computational branch
(e.g. empirical, theoretical, and computational ecology, or physics, or linguistics.)
Computational Science traditionally meant simulation. It grew out of our inability to
find closed-form solutions for complex mathematical models.
1990-now, data science
The flood of data from new scientific instruments and simulations
The ability to economically store and manage petabytes of data online
The Internet and computing Grid that makes all these archives universally accessible
Scientific info. management, acquisition, organization, query, and visualization tasks
scale almost linearly with data volumes. Data mining is a major new challenge!
Jim Gray and Alex Szalay, The World Wide Telescope: An Archetype for Online Science,
Comm. ACM, 45(11): 50-54, Nov. 2002
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 4
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 5
Data vs. Information
The world is data rich but information poor.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 6
What is Data Mining
Necessity is the mother of invention. – Plato
Searching for gold from rocks: Is it gold mining or rock
mining? (of course gold mining)
Searching for knowledge from a large collection of data.
Should it be Knowledge mining or data mining?
A misnomer (data mining) prevails.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 7
What is Data Mining
Data mining turns a large collection of data into knowledge.
It searches for knowledge (interesting patterns) in data.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 8
What Is Data Mining?
Definition:
Data mining is the process of discovering
interesting patterns and knowledge from
large amounts of data.
Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit,
previously unknown and potentially useful)
patterns or knowledge from huge amount of
data.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 9
What Is Data Mining?
Alternative names
Knowledge discovery (mining) in databases (KDD), knowledge
extraction, data/pattern analysis, data archeology, data
dredging, information harvesting, business intelligence, etc.
Watch out: Is everything “data mining”?
Simple search and query processing
Inductive reasoning
(Deductive reasoning) expert systems
Inductive reasoning moves from specific instances into a
generalized conclusion, while deductive reasoning moves
from generalized principles that are known to be true to a
true and specific conclusion.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 10
Knowledge Discovery (KDD) Process
Data mining—core of Pattern Evaluation
knowledge discovery
process
Data Mining
Task-relevant Data
Data Warehouse Selection
Data Cleaning
Data Integration
Databases
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 11
Knowledge Discovery (KDD) Process
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 13
Multi-Dimensional View of Data Mining
Data to be mined
Relational, data warehouse, transactional, stream, object-
oriented/relational, active, spatial, time-series (e.g., stock market), text,
multi-media, heterogeneous, legacy, WWW
Active Data: Data housed in a storage device or other electronic medium
that is accessed frequently or continuously as part of a business process
or other operation.
Patterns to be mined
Characterization, discrimination, association, classification, clustering,
trend/deviation, outlier analysis, etc.
Multiple/integrated functions and mining at multiple levels
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 14
Multi-Dimensional View of Data Mining
Technologies utilized
Database-oriented, data warehouse (OLAP), machine learning, statistics,
visualization, pattern recognition, algorithms, information retrieval, high
performance computing, applications, etc.
Applications adapted
Business intelligence, web search engines, retail, telecommunication,
banking, fraud analysis, bio-data mining, stock market analysis, text
mining, Web mining, image processing, etc.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 15
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 16
Data Mining: Confluence of Multiple Disciplines
Database
Technology Statistics
Machine Visualization
Learning Data Mining
Pattern
Recognition Other
Algorithm Disciplines
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 17
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 (DNA chip) may have tens of thousands of dimensions
High complexity of data
Data streams and sensor data
Time-series data, temporal data ( that varies over time), sequence data
(biological related to collection of nucleic acid sequences)
Structure data, graphs, social networks and multi-linked data
Heterogeneous databases and legacy databases
Spatial (geographic information), spatiotemporal, multimedia, text and
Web data
Software programs, scientific simulations
New and sophisticated applications
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 18
Data Mining: Classification Schemes
General Functionality/Task Type
Descriptive data mining and Predictive data mining
Descriptive data mining: Descriptive data mining tasks
usually finds data describing patterns and comes up with new,
significant information from the available data set. A retailer
trying to identify products that are purchased together can be
considered as a descriptive data mining task.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 19
Data Mining: Classification Schemes
Predictive data mining: Predictive data mining tasks come up
with a model from the available data set that is helpful in
predicting unknown or future values of another data set of
interest. A medical practitioner trying to diagnose a disease based
on the medical test results of a patient can be considered as a
predictive data mining task.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 20
Data Mining: Classification Schemes
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 21
Data Mining: Classification Schemes
Different views lead to different classifications
Data view: Kinds of data to be mined
Knowledge view: Kinds of knowledge to be discovered
Method view: Kinds of techniques utilized
Application view: Kinds of applications adapted
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 22
Data Mining Functionalities
Multidimensional concept description: Concept
description generates descriptions for characterization and comparison of
the data. Characterization, comparison 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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 23
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 24
Top-10 Most Popular DM Algorithms:
18 Identified Candidates (I)
Classification
#1. C4.5: Quinlan, J. R. C4.5: Programs for Machine Learning. Morgan
Kaufmann., 1993.
#2. CART: L. Breiman, J. Friedman, R. Olshen, and C. Stone. Classification
and Regression Trees. Wadsworth, 1984.
#3. K Nearest Neighbours (kNN): Hastie, T. and Tibshirani, R. 1996.
Discriminant Adaptive Nearest Neighbor Classification. TPAMI. 18(6)
#4. Naive Bayes Hand, D.J., Yu, K., 2001. Idiot's Bayes: Not So Stupid
After All? Internat. Statist. Rev. 69, 385-398.
Statistical Learning
#5. SVM: Vapnik, V. N. 1995. The Nature of Statistical Learning Theory.
Springer-Verlag.
#6. EM: McLachlan, G. and Peel, D. (2000). Finite Mixture Models. J.
Wiley, New York. Association Analysis
#7. Apriori: Rakesh Agrawal and Ramakrishnan Srikant. Fast Algorithms
for Mining Association Rules. In VLDB '94.
#8. FP-Tree: Han, J., Pei, J., and Yin, Y. 2000. Mining frequent patterns
without candidate generation. In SIGMOD '00.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 25
The 18 Identified Candidates (II)
Link Mining
#9. PageRank: Brin, S. and Page, L. 1998. The anatomy of a
large-scale hypertextual Web search engine. In WWW-7, 1998.
#10. HITS: Kleinberg, J. M. 1998. Authoritative sources in a
hyperlinked environment. SODA, 1998.
Clustering
#11. K-Means: MacQueen, J. B., Some methods for classification
and analysis of multivariate observations, in Proc. 5th Berkeley
Symp. Mathematical Statistics and Probability, 1967.
#12. BIRCH: Zhang, T., Ramakrishnan, R., and Livny, M. 1996.
BIRCH: an efficient data clustering method for very large
databases. In SIGMOD '96.
Bagging and Boosting
#13. AdaBoost: Freund, Y. and Schapire, R. E. 1997. A decision-
theoretic generalization of on-line learning and an application to
boosting. J. Comput. Syst. Sci. 55, 1 (Aug. 1997), 119-139.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 26
The 18 Identified Candidates (III)
Sequential Patterns
#14. GSP: Srikant, R. and Agrawal, R. 1996. Mining Sequential Patterns:
Generalizations and Performance Improvements. In Proceedings of the
5th International Conference on Extending Database Technology, 1996.
#15. PrefixSpan: J. Pei, J. Han, B. Mortazavi-Asl, H. Pinto, Q. Chen, U.
Dayal and M-C. Hsu. PrefixSpan: Mining Sequential Patterns Efficiently by
Prefix-Projected Pattern Growth. In ICDE '01.
Integrated Mining
#16. CBA: Liu, B., Hsu, W. and Ma, Y. M. Integrating classification and
association rule mining. KDD-98.
Rough Sets
#17. Finding reduct: Zdzislaw Pawlak, Rough Sets: Theoretical Aspects of
Reasoning about Data, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Norwell, MA, 1992
Graph Mining
#18. gSpan: Yan, X. and Han, J. 2002. gSpan: Graph-Based Substructure
Pattern Mining. In ICDM '02.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 27
Top-10 Algorithm Finally Selected at
ICDM’06
#1: C4.5 (61 votes)
#2: K-Means (60 votes)
#3: SVM (58 votes)
#4: Apriori (52 votes)
#5: EM (48 votes)
#6: PageRank (46 votes)
#7: AdaBoost (45 votes)
#7: kNN (45 votes)
#7: Naive Bayes (45 votes)
#10: CART (34 votes)
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 28
Major Issues in Data Mining
Mining methodology
Mining various and new kinds of knowledge
Multidimensional space: searching for interesting patterns among
combinations of dimensions (attributes).
Data Mining an interdisciplinary effort
Boosting the power of discovery in a networked environment:
Handling uncertainty, noise, or incompleteness of data:
Pattern evaluation and pattern- or constraint-guided mining:
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 29
Major Issues in Data Mining
User interaction
Interactive mining of knowledge at multiple levels of abstraction
Incorporation of background knowledge:
Data mining query languages and ad-hoc mining
Presentation and visualization of data mining results
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 30
Major Issues in Data Mining
Efficiency and Scalability
Efficiency and scalability of data mining algorithms
Parallel, distributed, and incremental mining algorithms
Cloud computing and cluster computing
Diversity of Database Types
Handling complex types of data: Structured, semi-
structured, un- structured; stable data repositories to
dynamic data streams; biological sequences, sensor data,
spatial data, multimedia data, software program code, Web
data, and social network data
Mining dynamic, networked, and global data repositories
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 31
Major Issues in Data Mining
Data Mining and Society
Social impacts of data mining:
How can we use data mining technology to benefit
society?
How can we guard against its misuse?
Invisible data mining
Privacy-preserving data mining:
The philosophy is to observe data sensitivity and preserve
people's privacy while performing successful data
mining.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 32
A Brief History of Data Mining Society
1989 IJCAI Workshop on Knowledge Discovery in Databases
Knowledge Discovery in Databases (G. Piatetsky-Shapiro and W. Frawley,
1991)
1991-1994 Workshops on Knowledge Discovery in Databases
Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (U. Fayyad, G.
Piatetsky-Shapiro, P. Smyth, and R. Uthurusamy, 1996)
1995-1998 International Conferences on Knowledge Discovery in Databases
and Data Mining (KDD’95-98)
Journal of Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery (1997)
ACM SIGKDD conferences since 1998 and SIGKDD Explorations
More conferences on data mining
PAKDD (1997), PKDD (1997), SIAM-Data Mining (2001), (IEEE) ICDM
(2001), etc.
ACM Transactions on KDD starting in 2007
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 33
Conferences and Journals on Data Mining
KDD Conferences Other related conferences
ACM SIGKDD Int. Conf. on ACM SIGMOD
Knowledge Discovery in VLDB
Databases and Data Mining
(KDD) (IEEE) ICDE
SIAM Data Mining Conf. (SDM)
WWW, SIGIR
(IEEE) Int. Conf. on Data ICML, CVPR, NIPS
Mining (ICDM) Journals
Conf. on Principles and
Data Mining and Knowledge
practices of Knowledge
Discovery and Data Mining Discovery (DAMI or DMKD)
(PKDD) IEEE Trans. On Knowledge
Pacific-Asia Conf. on and Data Eng. (TKDE)
Knowledge Discovery and Data KDD Explorations
Mining (PAKDD)
ACM Trans. on KDD
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 34
Where to Find References? DBLP, CiteSeer, Google
Data mining and KDD (SIGKDD: CDROM)
Conferences: ACM-SIGKDD, IEEE-ICDM, SIAM-DM, PKDD, PAKDD, etc.
Journal: Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, KDD Explorations, ACM TKDD
Database systems (SIGMOD: ACM SIGMOD Anthology—CD ROM)
Conferences: ACM-SIGMOD, ACM-PODS, VLDB, IEEE-ICDE, EDBT, ICDT, DASFAA
Journals: IEEE-TKDE, ACM-TODS/TOIS, JIIS, J. ACM, VLDB J., Info. Sys., etc.
AI & Machine Learning
Conferences: Machine learning (ML), AAAI, IJCAI, COLT (Learning Theory), CVPR, NIPS, etc.
Journals: Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, Knowledge and Information Systems,
IEEE-PAMI, etc.
Web and IR
Conferences: SIGIR, WWW, CIKM, etc.
Journals: WWW: Internet and Web Information Systems,
Statistics
Conferences: Joint Stat. Meeting, etc.
Journals: Annals of statistics, etc.
Visualization
Conference proceedings: CHI, ACM-SIGGraph, etc.
Journals: IEEE Trans. visualization and computer graphics, etc.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 35
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
B. Liu, Web Data Mining, Springer 2006.
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 36
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.
Data mining systems and architectures
Major issues in data mining
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 37
Supplementary Lecture Slides
Note: The slides following the end of chapter
summary are supplementary slides that could be
useful for supplementary readings or teaching
These slides may have its corresponding text
contents in the book chapters, but were omitted
due to limited time in author’s own course lecture
The slides in other chapters have similar
convention and treatment
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 38
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) and Web mining
Stream data mining
Bioinformatics and bio-data analysis
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 39
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 groups of customers
Predict what factors will attract new customers
Provision of summary information
Multidimensional summary reports
Statistical summary information (data central tendency and variation)
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 40
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 41
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 42
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 43
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.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 44
Find All and Only Interesting Patterns?
Find all the interesting patterns: Completeness
Can a data mining system find all the interesting patterns? Do we
need to find all of the interesting patterns?
Heuristic vs. exhaustive search
Association vs. classification vs. clustering
Search for only interesting patterns: An optimization problem
Can a data mining system find only the interesting patterns?
Approaches
First general all the patterns and then filter out the uninteresting
ones
Generate only the interesting patterns—mining query
optimization
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 45
Other Pattern Mining Issues
Precise patterns vs. approximate patterns
Association and correlation mining: possible find sets of precise
patterns
But approximate patterns can be more compact and sufficient
How to find high quality approximate patterns??
Gene sequence mining: approximate patterns are inherent
How to derive efficient approximate pattern mining
algorithms??
Constrained vs. non-constrained patterns
Why constraint-based mining?
What are the possible kinds of constraints? How to push
constraints into the mining process?
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 46
A Few Announcements (Sept. 1)
A new section CS412ADD: CRN 48711 and its
rules/arrangements
4th Unit for I2CS students
Survey report for mining new types of data
4th Unit for in-campus students
High quality implementation of one selected (to be
discussed with TA/Instructor) data mining algorithm in
the textbook
Or, a research report if you plan to devote your future
research thesis on data mining
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 47
Why Data Mining Query Language?
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 48
Primitives that Define a Data Mining Task
Task-relevant data
Database or data warehouse name
Database tables or data warehouse cubes
Condition for data selection
Relevant attributes or dimensions
Data grouping criteria
Type of knowledge to be mined
Characterization, discrimination, association, classification,
prediction, clustering, outlier analysis, other data mining tasks
Background knowledge
Pattern interestingness measurements
Visualization/presentation of discovered patterns
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 49
Primitive 3: Background Knowledge
A typical kind of background knowledge: Concept hierarchies
Schema hierarchy
E.g., street < city < province_or_state < country
Set-grouping hierarchy
E.g., {20-39} = young, {40-59} = middle_aged
Operation-derived hierarchy
email address: hagonzal@cs.uiuc.edu
login-name < department < university < country
Rule-based hierarchy
low_profit_margin (X) <= price(X, P1) and cost (X, P2) and (P1 -
P2) < $50
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 50
Primitive 4: Pattern Interestingness Measure
Simplicity
e.g., (association) rule length, (decision) tree size
Certainty
e.g., confidence, P(A|B) = #(A and B)/ #(B), classification
reliability or accuracy, certainty factor, rule strength, rule quality,
discriminating weight, etc.
Utility
potential usefulness, e.g., support (association), noise threshold
(description)
Novelty
not previously known, surprising (used to remove redundant
rules, e.g., Illinois vs. Champaign rule implication support ratio)
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 51
Primitive 5: Presentation of Discovered Patterns
Different backgrounds/usages may require different forms of
representation
E.g., rules, tables, crosstabs, pie/bar chart, etc.
Concept hierarchy is also important
Discovered knowledge might be more understandable when
represented at high level of abstraction
Interactive drill up/down, pivoting, slicing and dicing provide
different perspectives to data
Different kinds of knowledge require different representation:
association, classification, clustering, etc.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 52
DMQL—A Data Mining Query Language
Motivation
A DMQL can provide the ability to support ad-hoc and
interactive data mining
By providing a standardized language like SQL
Hope to achieve a similar effect like that SQL has on
relational database
Foundation for system development and evolution
Facilitate information exchange, technology transfer,
commercialization and wide acceptance
Design
DMQL is designed with the primitives described earlier
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 53
An Example Query in DMQL
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 54
Other Data Mining Languages &
Standardization Efforts
Association rule language specifications
MSQL (Imielinski & Virmani’99)
MineRule (Meo Psaila and Ceri’96)
Query flocks based on Datalog syntax (Tsur et al’98)
OLEDB for DM (Microsoft’2000) and recently DMX (Microsoft SQLServer
2005)
Based on OLE, OLE DB, OLE DB for OLAP, C#
Integrating DBMS, data warehouse and data mining
DMML (Data Mining Mark-up Language) by DMG (www.dmg.org)
Providing a platform and process structure for effective data mining
Emphasizing on deploying data mining technology to solve business
problems
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 55
Integration of Data Mining and Data Warehousing
Data mining systems, DBMS, Data warehouse systems
coupling
No coupling, loose-coupling, semi-tight-coupling, tight-coupling
On-line analytical mining data
integration of mining and OLAP technologies
Interactive mining multi-level knowledge
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 56
Coupling Data Mining with DB/DW Systems
No coupling—flat file processing, not recommended
Loose coupling
Fetching data from DB/DW
Semi-tight coupling—enhanced DM performance
Provide efficient implement a few data mining primitives in a
DB/DW system, e.g., sorting, indexing, aggregation, histogram
analysis, multiway join, precomputation of some stat functions
Tight coupling—A uniform information processing
environment
DM is smoothly integrated into a DB/DW system, mining query
is optimized based on mining query, indexing, query processing
methods, etc.
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 57
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
April 6, 2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 58