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
         Major issues in data mining

October 6, 2012             Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques   1
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,
October 6, 2012   constraints) from dataMining: Concepts and Techniques
                                     Data in large databases                            2
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.) and application-oriented DBMS (spatial,
                  scientific, engineering, etc.)
        1990s—2000s:
                 Data mining and data warehousing, multimedia databases, and
                  Web databases
October 6, 2012                    Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques         3
What Is Data Mining?

            Data mining (knowledge discovery in databases):

                  Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit, previously
                   unknown and potentially useful) information or patterns
                   from data in large databases
            Alternative names
                  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?
                  (Deductive) query processing.
                   Expert systems or small ML/statistical programs
October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques         4
Why Data Mining? — Potential
                  Applications

       Database analysis and decision support
             Market analysis and management
                  
                      target marketing, customer relation management, market
                      basket analysis, cross selling, market segmentation
             Risk analysis and management
                  
                      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

October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques       5
Market Analysis and Management (1)

        Where are the data sources for analysis?
                 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
                 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
October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques          6
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)
October 6, 2012                   Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques         7
Corporate Analysis and 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

October 6, 2012                   Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques           8
Fraud Detection and Management (1)

        Applications
                 widely used in health care, retail, credit card services,
                  telecommunications (phone card fraud), etc.
        Approach
                 use historical data to build models of fraudulent behavior and
                  use data mining to help identify similar instances
        Examples
                 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
October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques           9
Fraud Detection and Management (2)
        Detecting inappropriate medical treatment
                 Australian Health Insurance Commission identifies that in many
                  cases blanket screening tests were requested (save Australian
                  $1m/yr).
        Detecting telephone fraud
                 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
                 Analysts estimate that 38% of retail shrink is due to dishonest
                  employees.
October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques               10
Other Applications

         Sports
                 IBM Advanced Scout analyzed NBA game statistics (shots
                  blocked, assists, and fouls) to gain competitive advantage for
                  New York Knicks and Miami Heat
         Astronomy
                 JPL and the Palomar Observatory discovered 22 quasars with
                  the help of data mining
         Internet Web Surf-Aid
                 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.
October 6, 2012                     Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques           11
Data Mining: A KDD Process

                                                              Pattern Evaluation
        Data mining: the core of
         knowledge discovery
         process.                 Data Mining

                              Task-relevant Data


           Data                         Selection
           Warehouse
 Data Cleaning

                   Data Integration


                  Databases
October 6, 2012                       Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques         12
Steps of a KDD Process

        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
October 6, 2012                        Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques             13
Data Mining and Business
 Intelligence
     Increasing potential
     to support
     business decisions                                                         End User
                                             Making
                                             Decisions

                                         Data Presentation                      Business
                                                                                 Analyst
                                     Visualization Techniques
                                           Data Mining                            Data
                                        Information Discovery                   Analyst

                                          Data Exploration
                            Statistical Analysis, Querying and Reporting

                                  Data Warehouses / Data Marts
                                          OLAP, MDA                                DBA
                                         Data Sources
                  Paper, Files, Information Providers, Database Systems, OLTP
October 6, 2012                        Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques                14
Architecture of a Typical Data
                   Mining System
                              Graphical user interface


                                Pattern evaluation

                              Data mining engine
                                                                              Knowledge-base
                                   Database or data
                                   warehouse server
                  Data cleaning & data integration                Filtering

                                                           Data
                              Databases                  Warehouse

October 6, 2012                       Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques                 15
Data Mining: On What Kind of
             Data?

           Relational databases
           Data warehouses
           Transactional databases
           Advanced DB and information repositories
                 Object-oriented and object-relational databases
                 Spatial databases
                 Time-series data and temporal data
                 Text databases and multimedia databases
                 Heterogeneous and legacy databases
                 WWW
October 6, 2012                 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%]
October 6, 2012                  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
                  similarity and minimizing the interclass similarity
October 6, 2012                      Data Mining: Concepts and 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
October 6, 2012                       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 user’s belief in the data, e.g., unexpectedness,
              novelty, actionability, etc.
October 6, 2012                      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
                   
                       First general all the patterns and then filter out the
                       uninteresting ones.
                   
                       Generate only the interesting patterns—mining query
                       optimization
October 6, 2012                        Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques      21
Data Mining: Confluence of Multiple
                  Disciplines
                    Database
                                                           Statistics
                    Technology



      Machine
      Learning
                                 Data Mining                            Visualization



                  Information                                     Other
                    Science                                     Disciplines

October 6, 2012                  Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques                   22

Introduction data mining

  • 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  Major issues in data mining October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 1
  • 2.
    Motivation: “Necessity isthe 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, October 6, 2012 constraints) from dataMining: Concepts and Techniques Data in large databases 2
  • 3.
    Evolution of DatabaseTechnology  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.) and application-oriented DBMS (spatial, scientific, engineering, etc.)  1990s—2000s:  Data mining and data warehousing, multimedia databases, and Web databases October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 3
  • 4.
    What Is DataMining?  Data mining (knowledge discovery in databases):  Extraction of interesting (non-trivial, implicit, previously unknown and potentially useful) information or patterns from data in large databases  Alternative names  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?  (Deductive) query processing.  Expert systems or small ML/statistical programs October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 4
  • 5.
    Why Data Mining?— Potential Applications  Database analysis and decision support  Market analysis and management  target marketing, customer relation management, market basket analysis, cross selling, market segmentation  Risk analysis and management  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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 5
  • 6.
    Market Analysis andManagement (1)  Where are the data sources for analysis?  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  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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 6
  • 7.
    Market Analysis andManagement (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) October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 7
  • 8.
    Corporate Analysis andRisk 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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 8
  • 9.
    Fraud Detection andManagement (1)  Applications  widely used in health care, retail, credit card services, telecommunications (phone card fraud), etc.  Approach  use historical data to build models of fraudulent behavior and use data mining to help identify similar instances  Examples  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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 9
  • 10.
    Fraud Detection andManagement (2)  Detecting inappropriate medical treatment  Australian Health Insurance Commission identifies that in many cases blanket screening tests were requested (save Australian $1m/yr).  Detecting telephone fraud  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  Analysts estimate that 38% of retail shrink is due to dishonest employees. October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 10
  • 11.
    Other Applications  Sports  IBM Advanced Scout analyzed NBA game statistics (shots blocked, assists, and fouls) to gain competitive advantage for New York Knicks and Miami Heat  Astronomy  JPL and the Palomar Observatory discovered 22 quasars with the help of data mining  Internet Web Surf-Aid  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. October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 11
  • 12.
    Data Mining: AKDD Process Pattern Evaluation  Data mining: the core of knowledge discovery process. Data Mining Task-relevant Data Data Selection Warehouse Data Cleaning Data Integration Databases October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 12
  • 13.
    Steps of aKDD Process  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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 13
  • 14.
    Data Mining andBusiness Intelligence Increasing potential to support business decisions End User Making Decisions Data Presentation Business Analyst Visualization Techniques Data Mining Data Information Discovery Analyst Data Exploration Statistical Analysis, Querying and Reporting Data Warehouses / Data Marts OLAP, MDA DBA Data Sources Paper, Files, Information Providers, Database Systems, OLTP October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 14
  • 15.
    Architecture of aTypical Data Mining System Graphical user interface Pattern evaluation Data mining engine Knowledge-base Database or data warehouse server Data cleaning & data integration Filtering Data Databases Warehouse October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 15
  • 16.
    Data Mining: OnWhat Kind of Data?  Relational databases  Data warehouses  Transactional databases  Advanced DB and information repositories  Object-oriented and object-relational databases  Spatial databases  Time-series data and temporal data  Text databases and multimedia databases  Heterogeneous and legacy databases  WWW October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 16
  • 17.
    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%] October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 17
  • 18.
    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 similarity and minimizing the interclass similarity October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 18
  • 19.
    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 October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 19
  • 20.
    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 user’s belief in the data, e.g., unexpectedness, novelty, actionability, etc. October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 20
  • 21.
    Can We FindAll 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  First general all the patterns and then filter out the uninteresting ones.  Generate only the interesting patterns—mining query optimization October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 21
  • 22.
    Data Mining: Confluenceof Multiple Disciplines Database Statistics Technology Machine Learning Data Mining Visualization Information Other Science Disciplines October 6, 2012 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 22