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Preprocessing Techniques

This chapter discusses data preprocessing techniques. It covers data cleaning which involves handling incomplete, noisy and inconsistent data through techniques like filling in missing values, smoothing noisy data, and resolving inconsistencies. It also discusses data integration which combines data from multiple sources, and data reduction which reduces data dimensionality and size through techniques like discretization and compression. The chapter provides examples and details about how to apply these preprocessing steps.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
53 views

Preprocessing Techniques

This chapter discusses data preprocessing techniques. It covers data cleaning which involves handling incomplete, noisy and inconsistent data through techniques like filling in missing values, smoothing noisy data, and resolving inconsistencies. It also discusses data integration which combines data from multiple sources, and data reduction which reduces data dimensionality and size through techniques like discretization and compression. The chapter provides examples and details about how to apply these preprocessing steps.

Uploaded by

rekha
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 63

Data Mining:

Concepts and Techniques


(3rd ed.)
Chapter 3: Data Preprocessing
Han, Kamber, and Pei
Customized by: Rekha Ramesh

1
Chapter 3: Data Preprocessing

 Data Preprocessing: An Overview

 Data Quality

 Major Tasks in Data Preprocessing

 Data Cleaning

 Data Integration

 Data Reduction

 Data Transformation and Data Discretization

 Summary
2
Data Quality: Why Preprocess the Data?

 Measures for data quality: A multidimensional view


 Accuracy: correct or wrong, accurate or not
 Completeness: not recorded, unavailable, …
 Consistency: some modified but some not, dangling, …
 Timeliness: timely update?
 Believability: how trustable the data are correct?
 Interpretability: how easily the data can be
understood?

3
Major Tasks in Data Preprocessing
 Data cleaning
 Fill in missing values, smooth noisy data, identify or remove
outliers, and resolve inconsistencies
 Data integration
 Integration of multiple databases, data cubes, or files
 Data reduction
 Dimensionality reduction
 Numerosity reduction
 Data compression
 Data transformation and data discretization
 Normalization
 Concept hierarchy generation

4
Data Cleaning (1)

 Data in the Real World Is Dirty: Lots of


potentially incorrect data, e.g., instrument faulty,
human or computer error, transmission error
 incomplete: lacking attribute values, lacking
certain attributes of interest, or containing only
aggregate data
 e.g., Occupation=“ ” (missing data)
 noisy: containing noise, errors, or outliers
 e.g., Salary=“−10” (an error)

5
Data Cleaning (2)

 inconsistent: containing discrepancies in codes


or names, e.g.,
 Age=“42”, Birthday=“03/07/2010”
 Was rating “1, 2, 3”, now rating “A, B, C”
 discrepancy between duplicate records
 Intentional (e.g., disguised missing data)
 Jan. 1 as everyone’s birthday?

6
Incomplete (Missing) Data

 Data is not always available


 E.g., many tuples have no recorded
value for several attributes, such as
customer income in sales data
 Missing data may need to be inferred

7
Incomplete (Missing) Data

 Missing data may be due to


 equipment malfunction
 inconsistent with other recorded data and thus
deleted
 data not entered due to misunderstanding
 certain data may not be considered important
at the time of entry
 Did not register history or changes of the data

8
How to Handle Missing Data?

 Ignore the tuple: usually done when class


label is missing (when doing classification)
 not effective when the % of missing
values per attribute varies considerably

 Fill in the missing value manually: tedious +


infeasible?

9
How to Handle Missing Data?
 Fill in it automatically with
 a global constant : e.g., “unknown”, a new
class?!
 the attribute mean
 the attribute mean for all samples belonging to
the same class: smarter
 the most probable value: inference-based such
as Bayesian formula or decision tree

10
Noisy Data
 Noise: random error or variance in a measured variable
 Incorrect attribute values may be due to
 faulty data collection instruments

 data entry problems

 data transmission problems

 technology limitation

 inconsistency in naming convention

 Other data problems which require data cleaning


 duplicate records

 incomplete data

 inconsistent data

11
How to Handle Noisy Data?

 Binning
 first sort data and partition into (equal-frequency) bins

 then one can smooth by bin means, smooth by bin

median, smooth by bin boundaries, etc.


 Regression
 smooth by fitting the data into regression functions

 Clustering
 detect and remove outliers

 Combined computer and human inspection


 detect suspicious values and check by human (e.g.,

deal with possible outliers)

12
Binning Methods for Data Smoothing
 Sorted data for price (in dollars): 4, 8, 9, 15, 21, 21, 24, 25, 26,
28, 29, 34
* Partition into equal-frequency (equi-depth) bins:
- Bin 1: 4, 8, 9, 15
- Bin 2: 21, 21, 24, 25
- Bin 3: 26, 28, 29, 34
* Smoothing by bin means:
- Bin 1: 9, 9, 9, 9
- Bin 2: 23, 23, 23, 23
- Bin 3: 29, 29, 29, 29
* Smoothing by bin boundaries:
- Bin 1: 4, 4, 4, 15
- Bin 2: 21, 21, 25, 25
- Bin 3: 26, 26, 26, 34

13
Data Cleaning as a Process
 Data discrepancy detection
 Use metadata (e.g., domain, range, dependency, distribution)

 Check field overloading (squeeze new attribute definitions


into usable (bit) portions of already defined attributes )

 Check uniqueness rule, consecutive rule and null rule

 Use commercial tools


 Data scrubbing: use simple domain knowledge (e.g., postal

code, spell-check) to detect errors and make corrections


e.g. Drake, OpenRefine, Wrangler, etc.
 Data auditing: by analyzing data to discover rules and

relationship to detect violators (e.g., correlation and clustering


to find outliers)
e.g. ADAudit Plus, Open–Audit, etc.

14
Data Cleaning as a Process
 Data migration and integration
 Data migration tools: allow transformations to
be specified
 ETL (Extraction/Transformation/Loading) tools:
allow users to specify transformations through a
graphical user interface

 Integration of the two processes


 Iterative and interactive (e.g., Potter’s Wheels)

15
Data Integration
 Data integration:
 Combines data from multiple sources into a coherent store
 Schema integration: e.g., A.cust-id  B.cust-#
 Integrate metadata from different sources
 Entity identification problem:
 Identify real world entities from multiple data sources, e.g., Bill
Clinton = William Clinton
 Detecting and resolving data value conflicts
 For the same real world entity, attribute values from different
sources are different
 Possible reasons: different representations, different scales, e.g.,
metric vs. British units
16
Handling Redundancy in Data Integration

 Redundant data occur often when integration of multiple


databases
 Object identification: The same attribute or object
may have different names in different databases

 Derivable data: One attribute may be a “derived”


attribute in another table, e.g., annual revenue

 Redundant attributes may be possible to detect by


correlation analysis and covariance analysis

17
Correlation Analysis (Nominal Data)
 Χ2 (chi-square) test
2
(Observed  Expected)
2  
Expected
 The larger the Χ2 value, the more likely the variables are
related
 The cells that contribute the most to the Χ2 value are
those whose actual count is very different from the
expected count
 Correlation does not imply causality
 # of hospitals and # of car-theft in a city are correlated
 Both are causally linked to the third variable: population

18
Chi-Square Calculation: An Example

Play chess Not play chess Sum (row)


Like science fiction 250(90) 200(360) 450

Not like science fiction 50(210) 1000(840) 1050

Sum(col.) 300 1200 1500

 Χ2 (chi-square) calculation (numbers in parenthesis are


expected counts calculated based on the data distribution
in the two categories)
2 (250  90) 2 (50  210) 2 (200  360) 2 (1000  840) 2
      507.93
90 210 360 840
 It shows that like_science_fiction and play_chess are
correlated in the group
19
Correlation Analysis (Numeric Data)

 Correlation coefficient (also called Pearson’s product


moment coefficient)
n n

rA, B 
i 1 (ai  A)(bi  B) 

i 1
(ai bi )  n AB
(n  1) A B (n  1) A B

where n is the number of tuples, A and B are the respective


means of A and B, σA and σB are the respective standard deviation
of A and B, and Σ(aibi) is the sum of the AB cross-product.
 If rA,B > 0, A and B are positively correlated. The higher,
the stronger correlation.
 rA,B = 0: independent; rAB < 0: negatively correlated

20
Covariance (Numeric Data)
 Covariance is similar to correlation

Correlation coefficient:

where n is the number of tuples,


A and B are the respective mean or expected values of A and B,
σA and σB are the respective standard deviation of A and B.

21
Covariance (Numeric Data)
 Positive covariance: If CovA,B > 0, then A and B both tend to be
larger than their expected values.

 Negative covariance: If CovA,B < 0 then if A is larger than its


expected value, B is likely to be smaller than its expected value.

 Independence: CovA,B = 0 but the converse is not true:


 Some pairs of random variables may have a covariance of 0 but are not
independent.
 Only under some additional assumptions (e.g., the data follow
multivariate normal distributions) does a covariance of 0 imply
independence

02/09/20
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 22
Co-Variance: An Example

 It can be simplified in computation as

 Suppose two stocks A and B have the following values in one week:
(2, 5), (3, 8), (5, 10), (4, 11), (6, 14).

 Question: If the stocks are affected by the same industry trends, will
their prices rise or fall together?

 E(A) = (2 + 3 + 5 + 4 + 6)/ 5 = 20/5 = 4

 E(B) = (5 + 8 + 10 + 11 + 14) /5 = 48/5 = 9.6

 Cov(A,B) = (2×5+3×8+5×10+4×11+6×14)/5 − 4 × 9.6 = 4

 Thus, A and B rise together since Cov(A, B) > 0.


Data Reduction Strategies

 Data reduction: Obtain a reduced representation


of the data set that is much smaller in volume but
yet produces the same (or almost the same)
analytical results

 Why data reduction? — A database/data


warehouse may store terabytes of data. Complex
data analysis may take a very long time to run on
the complete data set.

24
Data Reduction Strategies

 Data reduction strategies


 Dimensionality reduction, e.g., remove unimportant attributes

 Wavelet transforms

 Principal Components Analysis (PCA)

 Feature subset selection, feature creation

 Numerosity reduction (some simply call it: Data Reduction)


 Regression and Log-Linear Models

 Histograms, clustering, sampling

 Data cube aggregation

 Data compression

25
Data Reduction 1: Dimensionality Reduction
 Curse of dimensionality
 When dimensionality increases, data becomes increasingly sparse
 Density and distance between points, which is critical to clustering, outlier
analysis, becomes less meaningful
 The possible combinations of subspaces will grow exponentially
 Dimensionality reduction
 Avoid the curse of dimensionality
 Help eliminate irrelevant features and reduce noise
 Reduce time and space required in data mining
 Allow easier visualization
 Dimensionality reduction techniques
 Wavelet transforms
 Principal Component Analysis
 Supervised and nonlinear techniques (e.g., feature selection)

26
Attribute Subset Selection
 Another way to reduce dimensionality of data
 Redundant attributes
 Duplicate much or all of the information contained in
one or more other attributes
 E.g., purchase price of a product and the amount of
sales tax paid
 Irrelevant attributes
 Contain no information that is useful for the data
mining task at hand
 E.g., students' ID is often irrelevant to the task of
predicting students' GPA

27
Heuristic Search in Attribute Selection
 There are 2d possible attribute combinations of d attributes

 Typical heuristic attribute selection methods:


 Stepwise forward selection: choose by significance tests

 Stepwise backward elimination

 Combination of forward selection

 Best combined attribute selection and elimination

 Decision Tree Induction


28
Attribute Creation (Feature Generation)
 Create new attributes (features) that can capture the
important information in a data set more effectively than
the original ones
 Three general methodologies
 Attribute extraction

 Domain-specific

 Mapping data to new space (see: data reduction)

 E.g., Fourier transformation, wavelet

transformation, etc
 Attribute construction

 Combining features

 Data discretization

29
Data Reduction 2: Numerosity Reduction
 Reduce data volume by choosing alternative, smaller
forms of data representation
 Parametric methods (e.g., regression)
 Assume the data fits some model, estimate model

parameters, store only the parameters, and discard


the data (except possible outliers)
 Ex.: Log-linear models—obtain value at a point in m-

D space as the product on appropriate marginal


subspaces
 Non-parametric methods
 Do not assume models

 Major families: histograms, clustering, sampling, …

30
Parametric Data Reduction: Regression
and Log-Linear Models

 Linear regression
 Data modeled to fit a straight line

 Often uses the least-square method to fit the line

 Multiple regression
 Allows a response variable Y to be modeled as a

linear function of multidimensional feature vector


 Log-linear model
 Approximates discrete multidimensional probability

distributions

31
Regression Analysis y

 Regression analysis: A collective name for


Y1
techniques for the modeling and analysis
of numerical data consisting of values of a Y1’ y=x+1
dependent variable (also called
response variable or measurement) and
X1 x
of one or more independent variables (aka.
explanatory variables or predictors)
 Used for prediction
 The parameters are estimated so as to give (including forecasting of
a "best fit" of the data time-series data), inference,
hypothesis testing, and
 Most commonly the best fit is evaluated by
modeling of causal
using the least squares method, but
relationships
other criteria have also been used

32
Regress Analysis and Log-Linear Models
 Linear regression: Y = w X + b
 Two regression coefficients, w and b, specify the line and are to be
estimated by using the data at hand
 Using the least squares criterion to the known values of Y1, Y2, …,
X1, X2, ….
 Multiple regression: Y = b0 + b1 X1 + b2 X2
 Many nonlinear functions can be transformed into the above
 Log-linear models:
 Approximate discrete multidimensional probability distributions
 Estimate the probability of each point (tuple) in a multi-dimensional
space for a set of discretized attributes, based on a smaller subset
of dimensional combinations
 Useful for dimensionality reduction and data smoothing
33
Histogram Analysis
 Divide data into buckets and 40
store average (sum) for each 35
bucket
30
 Partitioning rules:
25
 Equal-width: equal bucket 20
range
15
 Equal-frequency (or equal-
10
depth)
5
0
10000

20000

30000

40000

50000

60000

70000

80000

90000

100000
34
Clustering
 Partition data set into clusters based on similarity, and
store cluster representation (e.g., centroid and diameter)
only
 Can be very effective if data is clustered but not if data
is “smeared”
 Can have hierarchical clustering and be stored in multi-
dimensional index tree structures
 There are many choices of clustering definitions and
clustering algorithms

35
Sampling

 Sampling: obtaining a small sample s to represent the


whole data set N
 Allow a mining algorithm to run in complexity that is
potentially sub-linear to the size of the data
 Key principle: Choose a representative subset of the data
 Simple random sampling may have very poor
performance in the presence of skew
 Develop adaptive sampling methods, e.g., stratified
sampling:

36
Types of Sampling

 Simple random sampling


 There is an equal probability of selecting any particular
item
 Sampling without replacement
 Once an object is selected, it is removed from the
population
 Sampling with replacement
 A selected object is not removed from the population

 Stratified sampling:
 Partition the data set, and draw samples from each
partition (proportionally, i.e., approximately the same
percentage of the data)
 Used in conjunction with skewed data

37
Sampling: With or without Replacement

Raw Data
38
Sampling: Cluster or Stratified Sampling

Raw Data Cluster/Stratified Sample

39
Data Cube Aggregation
 The lowest level of a data cube (base cuboid)
 The aggregated data for an individual entity of interest
 E.g., a customer in a phone calling data warehouse
 Multiple levels of aggregation in data cubes
 Further reduce the size of data to deal with
 Reference appropriate levels
 Use the smallest representation which is enough to
solve the task
 Queries regarding aggregated information should be
answered using data cube, when possible
40
Sales data for a given branch of
AllElectronics

A data cube for sales at AllElectronics


Data Reduction 3: Data Compression
 String compression
 There are extensive theories and well-tuned algorithms

 Typically lossless, but only limited manipulation is

possible without expansion


 Audio/video compression
 Typically lossy compression, with progressive refinement

 Sometimes small fragments of signal can be

reconstructed without reconstructing the whole


 Time sequence is not audio
 Typically short and vary slowly with time

 Dimensionality and numerosity reduction may also be


considered as forms of data compression
42
Data Compression

Original Data Compressed


Data
lossless

Original Data
Approximated

43
Data Transformation
 A function that maps the entire set of values of a given attribute to a
new set of replacement values s.t. each old value can be identified
with one of the new values
 Methods
 Smoothing: Remove noise from data
 Attribute/feature construction
 New attributes constructed from the given ones
 Aggregation: Summarization, data cube construction
 Normalization: Scaled to fall within a smaller, specified range
 min-max normalization
 z-score normalization
 normalization by decimal scaling
 Discretization: Concept hierarchy climbing 44
Normalization
 Min-max normalization: to [new_minA, new_maxA]
v  minA
v'  (new _ maxA  new _ minA)  new _ minA
maxA  minA
 Ex. Let income range $12,000 to $98,000 normalized to [0.0,
73,600  12,000
1.0]. Then $73,000 is mapped to 98,000  12,000 (1.0  0)  0  0.716
 Z-score normalization (μ: mean, σ: standard deviation):
v  A
v'
 A

73,600  54,000
 Ex. Let μ = 54,000, σ = 16,000. Then 16,000
 1.225

 Normalization by decimal scaling


v
v'  j Where j is the smallest integer such that Max(|ν’|) < 1
10
45
Discretization
 Three types of attributes
 Nominal—values from an unordered set, e.g., color, profession
 Ordinal—values from an ordered set, e.g., military or academic
rank
 Numeric—real numbers, e.g., integer or real numbers
 Discretization: Divide the range of a continuous attribute into intervals
 Interval labels can then be used to replace actual data values
 Reduce data size by discretization
 Supervised vs. unsupervised
 Split (top-down) vs. merge (bottom-up)
 Discretization can be performed recursively on an attribute
 Prepare for further analysis, e.g., classification

46
Data Discretization Methods
 Typical methods: All the methods can be applied recursively
 Binning
 Top-down split, unsupervised
 Histogram analysis
 Top-down split, unsupervised
 Clustering analysis (unsupervised, top-down split or
bottom-up merge)
 Decision-tree analysis (supervised, top-down split)
 Correlation (e.g., 2) analysis (unsupervised, bottom-up
merge)

47
Simple Discretization: Binning

 Equal-width (distance) partitioning


 Divides the range into N intervals of equal size: uniform grid
 if A and B are the lowest and highest values of the attribute, the
width of intervals will be: W = (B –A)/N.
 The most straightforward, but outliers may dominate presentation
 Skewed data is not handled well

 Equal-depth (frequency) partitioning


 Divides the range into N intervals, each containing approximately
same number of samples
 Good data scaling
 Managing categorical attributes can be tricky
48
Binning Methods for Data Smoothing
 Sorted data for price (in dollars): 4, 8, 9, 15, 21, 21, 24, 25, 26,
28, 29, 34
* Partition into equal-frequency (equi-depth) bins:
- Bin 1: 4, 8, 9, 15
- Bin 2: 21, 21, 24, 25
- Bin 3: 26, 28, 29, 34
* Smoothing by bin means:
- Bin 1: 9, 9, 9, 9
- Bin 2: 23, 23, 23, 23
- Bin 3: 29, 29, 29, 29
* Smoothing by bin boundaries:
- Bin 1: 4, 4, 4, 15
- Bin 2: 21, 21, 25, 25
- Bin 3: 26, 26, 26, 34
49
Discretization by Classification &
Correlation Analysis
 Classification (e.g., decision tree analysis)
 Supervised: Given class labels, e.g., cancerous vs. benign
 Using entropy to determine split point (discretization point)
 Top-down, recursive split
 Correlation analysis (e.g., Chi-merge: χ2-based discretization)
 Supervised: use class information
 Bottom-up merge: find the best neighboring intervals (those
having similar distributions of classes, i.e., low χ2 values) to merge
 Merge performed recursively, until a predefined stopping condition

50
Concept Hierarchy Generation

 Concept hierarchy organizes concepts (i.e., attribute values)


hierarchically and is usually associated with each dimension in a data
warehouse
 Concept hierarchies facilitate drilling and rolling in data warehouses to
view data in multiple granularity
 Concept hierarchy formation: Recursively reduce the data by collecting
and replacing low level concepts (such as numeric values for age) by
higher level concepts (such as youth, adult, or senior)
 Concept hierarchies can be explicitly specified by domain experts
and/or data warehouse designers
 Concept hierarchy can be automatically formed for both numeric and
nominal data. For numeric data, use discretization methods shown.

51
Concept Hierarchy Generation
for Nominal Data
 Specification of a partial/total ordering of attributes
explicitly at the schema level by users or experts
 street < city < state < country
 Specification of a hierarchy for a set of values by explicit
data grouping
 {Urbana, Champaign, Chicago} < Illinois
 Specification of only a partial set of attributes
 E.g., only street < city, not others
 Automatic generation of hierarchies (or attribute levels) by
the analysis of the number of distinct values
 E.g., for a set of attributes: {street, city, state, country}
52
Automatic Concept Hierarchy Generation
 Some hierarchies can be automatically generated based on
the analysis of the number of distinct values per attribute in
the data set
 The attribute with the most distinct values is placed at
the lowest level of the hierarchy
 Exceptions, e.g., weekday, month, quarter, year

country 15 distinct values

province_or_ state 365 distinct values

city 3567 distinct values

street 674,339 distinct values


53
What is Concept Description?

 Descriptive vs. predictive data mining


 Descriptive mining: describes concepts or task-relevant

data sets in concise, summarative, informative,


discriminative forms
 Predictive mining: Based on data and analysis,

constructs models for the database, and predicts the


trend and properties of unknown data
 Concept description:
 Characterization: provides a concise and succinct

summarization of the given collection of data


 Comparison: provides descriptions comparing two or

more collections of data


02/09/20
54
Data Generalization and Summarization-
based Characterization
 Data generalization
 A process which abstracts a large set of task-relevant
data in a database from a low conceptual levels to
higher ones.
1
2
3
4
Conceptual levels
 Approaches: 5

 Data cube approach(OLAP approach)


 Attribute-oriented induction approach

02/09/20
55
Attribute-Oriented Induction
 Proposed in 1989 (KDD ‘89 workshop)
 Not confined to categorical data nor particular measures
 How it is done?
 Collect the task-relevant data (initial relation) using a
relational database query
 Perform generalization by attribute removal or
attribute generalization
 Apply aggregation by merging identical, generalized
tuples and accumulating their respective counts
 Interactive presentation with users

02/09/20
56
Basic Principles of Attribute-Oriented Induction

 Data focusing: task-relevant data, including dimensions,


and the result is the initial relation
 Attribute-removal: remove attribute A if there is a large set
of distinct values for A but (1) there is no generalization
operator on A, or (2) A’s higher level concepts are
expressed in terms of other attributes
 Attribute-generalization: If there is a large set of distinct
values for A, and there exists a set of generalization
operators on A, then select an operator and generalize A
 Attribute-threshold control: typical 2-8, specified/default
 Generalized relation threshold control: control the final
relation/rule size
02/09/20
57
Attribute-Oriented Induction: Basic
Algorithm
 InitialRel: Query processing of task-relevant data, deriving
the initial relation.
 PreGen: Based on the analysis of the number of distinct
values in each attribute, determine generalization plan for
each attribute: removal? or how high to generalize?
 PrimeGen: Based on the PreGen plan, perform
generalization to the right level to derive a “prime
generalized relation”, accumulating the counts.
 Presentation: User interaction: (1) adjust levels by drilling,
(2) pivoting, (3) mapping into rules, cross tabs,
visualization presentations.

02/09/20
58
Example

 DMQL: Describe general characteristics of graduate


students in the Big-University database
use Big_University_DB
mine characteristics as “Science_Students”
in relevance to name, gender, major, birth_place,
birth_date, residence, phone#, gpa
from student
where status in “graduate”
 Corresponding SQL statement:
Select name, gender, major, birth_place, birth_date,
residence, phone#, gpa
from student
where status in {“Msc”, “MBA”, “PhD” }
02/09/20
59
Class Characterization: An Example
Name Gender Major Birth-Place Birth_date Residence Phone # GPA

Initial Jim M CS Vancouver,BC, 8-12-76 3511 Main St., 687-4598 3.67


Woodman Canada Richmond
Relation Scott M CS Montreal, Que, 28-7-75 345 1st Ave., 253-9106 3.70
Lachance Canada Richmond
Laura Lee F Physics Seattle, WA, USA 25-8-70 125 Austin Ave., 420-5232 3.83
… … … … … Burnaby … …

Removed Retained Sci,Eng, Country Age range City Removed Excl,
Bus VG,..
Gender Major Birth_region Age_range Residence GPA Count
Prime M Science Canada 20-25 Richmond Very-good 16
Generalized F Science Foreign 25-30 Burnaby Excellent 22
Relation … … … … … … …

Birth_Region
Canada Foreign Total
Gender
M 16 14 30
F 10 22 32
Total 26 36 62

02/09/20
60
Presentation of Generalized Results
 Generalized relation:
 Relations where some or all attributes are generalized, with counts
or other aggregation values accumulated.
 Cross tabulation:
 Mapping results into cross tabulation form (similar to contingency
tables).
 Visualization techniques:
 Pie charts, bar charts, curves, cubes, and other visual forms.
 Quantitative characteristic rules:
 Mapping generalized result into characteristic rules with quantitative
information associated with it, e.g.,
grad ( x)  male ( x) 
birth _ region ( x) "Canada "[t :53 %]  birth _ region ( x) " foreign"[t : 47%].
61
Summary
 Data quality: accuracy, completeness, consistency, timeliness,
believability, interpretability
 Data cleaning: e.g. missing/noisy values, outliers
 Data integration from multiple sources:
 Entity identification problem

 Remove redundancies

 Detect inconsistencies

 Data reduction
 Dimensionality reduction

 Numerosity reduction

 Data compression

 Data transformation and data discretization


 Normalization

 Concept hierarchy generation

62
References
 D. P. Ballou and G. K. Tayi. Enhancing data quality in data warehouse environments. Comm. of
ACM, 42:73-78, 1999
 A. Bruce, D. Donoho, and H.-Y. Gao. Wavelet analysis. IEEE Spectrum, Oct 1996
 T. Dasu and T. Johnson. Exploratory Data Mining and Data Cleaning. John Wiley, 2003
 J. Devore and R. Peck. Statistics: The Exploration and Analysis of Data. Duxbury Press, 1997.
 H. Galhardas, D. Florescu, D. Shasha, E. Simon, and C.-A. Saita. Declarative data cleaning:
Language, model, and algorithms. VLDB'01
 M. Hua and J. Pei. Cleaning disguised missing data: A heuristic approach. KDD'07
 H. V. Jagadish, et al., Special Issue on Data Reduction Techniques. Bulletin of the Technical
Committee on Data Engineering, 20(4), Dec. 1997
 H. Liu and H. Motoda (eds.). Feature Extraction, Construction, and Selection: A Data Mining
Perspective. Kluwer Academic, 1998
 J. E. Olson. Data Quality: The Accuracy Dimension. Morgan Kaufmann, 2003
 D. Pyle. Data Preparation for Data Mining. Morgan Kaufmann, 1999
 V. Raman and J. Hellerstein. Potters Wheel: An Interactive Framework for Data Cleaning and
Transformation, VLDB’2001
 T. Redman. Data Quality: The Field Guide. Digital Press (Elsevier), 2001
 R. Wang, V. Storey, and C. Firth. A framework for analysis of data quality research. IEEE Trans.
Knowledge and Data Engineering, 7:623-640, 1995
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