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Business Systems Intelligence: 5. Classification 2

Dr. Brian Mac Namee ( www.comp.dit.ie/bmacnamee ). Business Systems Intelligence: 5. Classification 2. Acknowledgments. These notes are based (heavily) on those provided by the authors to accompany “Data Mining: Concepts & Techniques” by Jiawei Han and Micheline Kamber

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Business Systems Intelligence: 5. Classification 2

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  1. Dr. Brian Mac Namee (www.comp.dit.ie/bmacnamee) Business Systems Intelligence:5. Classification 2

  2. Acknowledgments • These notes are based (heavily) on those provided by the authors to accompany “Data Mining: Concepts & Techniques” by Jiawei Han and Micheline Kamber • Some slides are also based on trainer’s kits provided by More information about the book is available at:www-sal.cs.uiuc.edu/~hanj/bk2/ And information on SAS is available at:www.sas.com

  3. Classification & Prediction • Today we will look at: • What are classification & prediction? • Issues regarding classification and prediction • Classification techniques: • Case based reasoning (k-nearest neighbour algorithm) • Decision tree induction • Bayesian classification • Neural networks • Support vector machines (SVM) • Classification based on from association rule mining concepts • Other classification methods • Prediction • Classification accuracy

  4. Mathematically Classification • Classification: • Predicts categorical class labels • Typical Applications • {CreditHistory, Salary} -> CreditApproval (Yes/No) • {Temp, Humidity} --> Rain (Yes/No)

  5. x x x x x x x o x x o o x o o o o o o o o o o Linear Classification • Binary Classification problem • The data above the red line belongs to class ‘x’ • The data below red line belongs to class ‘o’ • Examples – SVM, Perceptron, Probabilistic Classifiers

  6. Discriminative Classifiers • Advantages • Prediction accuracy is generally high • Robust, works when training examples contain errors • Fast evaluation of the learned target function • Criticism • Long training time • Difficult to understand the learned function (weights) • Not easy to incorporate domain knowledge

  7. Artificial Neural Networks • A biologically inspired classification technique • Formed from interconnected layers of simple artificial neurons • ANN history: • 1943: McCulloch & Pitts • 1959: Rosenblatt (Perceptron) • 1959: Widrow & Hoff (ADALINE and MADALINE) • 1969: Marvin Minsky and Seymour Papert's • 1974: Werbos (Backprop) • 1982: John Hopfield

  8. x0 w0 x1 w1 f (x) xn wn bias An Artifical Neuron • The n-dimensional input vector x is mapped into variable y by means of the scalar product and a nonlinear function mapping

  9. ANN: Multi-Layer Perceptrons (MLPs) • Multi Layer Perceptrons (MLPs) are one of the best known ANN types • Composed of layers of fully interconnected artificial neurons • Training involves repeatedly presenting a series of training cases to the network and adjusting neurons’ weights and biases to minimise classification error • Typically the backpropogation of error algorithm is used for training

  10. InputLayer HiddenLayer Wind Speed OutputLayer Wind Direction Temperature Good Surf Wave Size Wave Period MLP Example • Remember our surfing example • An MLP can be built and trained to perform classification for this problem

  11. Network Training • The ultimate objective of training • Obtain a set of weights that makes almost all of the tuples in the training data classified correctly • Steps • Initialize weights with random values • Feed the input tuples into the network one by one • For each unit • Compute the net input to the unit as a linear combination of all the inputs to the unit • Compute the output value using the activation function • Compute the error • Update the weights and the bias

  12. Summary of ANN Classification • Strengths • Fast classification • Very good generalization capacity • Weaknesses • No explanation capability – black box • Training can be slow – eager learning • Retraining is difficult • Lots of other network types, but MLP is probably the most common

  13. Support Vector Machines (SVM) • In classification problems we try to create decision boundaries between classes • A choice must be made between possible boundaries Class 2 Class 1

  14. Class 2 m Class 1 SVMs (cont…) • The decision boundary should be as far away from the data of both classes as possible

  15. Small Margin Large Margin Support Vectors Margins

  16. Linear Support Vector Machine • Given a set of points with label • The SVM finds a hyperplane defined by the pair (w, b), where w is the normal to the plane and b is the distance from the origin • Where: • x - feature vector • b - bias, y- class label • ||w|| - margin

  17. f(.) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) f( ) Feature space Input space SVMs: The Clever Bit! • What about when classes are not linearly separable? • Kernel functions and the kernel trick are used to transform data into a different linearly separable feature space

  18. (0,1) + + - + -1 0 +1 + - (1,0) (0,0) SVMs: The Clever Bit! (cont...) • What if the data is not linearly separable? • Project the data to high dimensional space where it is linearly separable and then we can use linear SVM – (Using Kernels)

  19. SVM Example Example of Non-linear SVM

  20. Results SVM Example (cont…)

  21. Summary of SVM Classification • Strengths • Over-fitting is not common • Works well with high dimensional data • Fast classification • Good generalization capacity • Weaknesses • Retraining is difficult • No explanation capability • Slow training • At the cutting edge of machine learning

  22. SVM Relatively new concept Nice generalization properties Hard to learn – learned in batch mode using quadratic programming techniques Using kernels can learn very complex functions ANN Quite old Generalizes well but doesn’t have strong mathematical foundation Can easily be learned in incremental fashion To learn complex functions – use multilayer perceptron (not that trivial) SVM vs. ANN

  23. SVM Related Links • http://svm.dcs.rhbnc.ac.uk/ • http://www.kernel-machines.org/ • C. J. C. Burges. A Tutorial on Support Vector Machines for Pattern Recognition. Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, 2(2), 1998. • SVMlight – Software (in C) http://ais.gmd.de/~thorsten/svm_light • BOOK: An Introduction to Support Vector Machines N. Cristianini and J. Shawe-TaylorCambridge University Press

  24. Association-Based Classification • Several methods for association-based classification • ARCS: Quantitative association mining and clustering of association rules (Lent et al’97) • It beats C4.5 in (mainly) scalability and also accuracy • Associative classification: (Liu et al’98) • It mines high support and high confidence rules in the form of “cond_set => y”, where y is a class label • CAEP (Classification by aggregating emerging patterns) (Dong et al’99) • Emerging patterns (EPs): the itemsets whose support increases significantly from one class to another • Mine Eps based on minimum support and growth rate

  25. What Is Prediction? • Prediction is similar to classification • First, construct a model • Second, use model to predict unknown value • Major method for prediction is regression • Linear and multiple regression • Non-linear regression • Prediction is different from classification • Classification refers to predict categorical class label • Prediction models continuous-valued functions

  26. Regress Analysis and Log-Linear Models in Prediction • Linear regression: Y =  +  X • Two parameters,  and , 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 + b1X1 + b2X2 • Many nonlinear functions can be transformed into the above • Log-linear models: • The multi-way table of joint probabilities is approximated by a product of lower-order tables • Probability: p(a, b, c, d) = ab acad bcd

  27. Prediction: Numerical Data

  28. Prediction: Categorical Data

  29. Concerns Over Classification Techniques • When choosing a technique for a specific classification problem we must consider the following issues: • Classification accuracy • Training speed • Classification speed • Danger of over-fitting • Generalisation capacity • Implications for retraining • Explanation capability

  30. Evaluating Classification Accuracy • During development, and in testing before deploying a classifier in the wild, we need to be able to quantify the performance of the classifier • How accurate is the classifier? • When the classifier is wrong, how is it wrong? • Useful to decide on which classifier (which parameters) to use and to estimate what the performance of the system will be

  31. Evaluating Classifiers (cont…) • How we do this depends on how much data is available • If there is unlimited data available then there is no problem • Usually we have less data than we would like so we have to compromise • Use hold-out testing sets • Cross validation • K-fold cross validation • Leave-one-out validation • Parallel live test

  32. Training Set Test Set Hold-Out Testing Sets • Split the available data into a training set and a test set • Train the classifier in the training set and evaluate based on the test set • A couple of drawbacks • We may not have enough data • We may happen upon an unfortunate split Total number of available examples

  33. K-Fold Cross Validation • Divide the entire data set into k folds • For each of k experiments, use kth fold for testing and everything else for training Total number of available examples Test Set K = 0 Test Set K = 1 Test Set K = 2 Test Set K = 3

  34. K-Fold Cross Validation (cont…) • The accuracy of the system is calculated as the average error across the k folds • The main advantages of k-fold cross validation are that every example is used in testing at some stage and the problem of an unfortunate split is avoided • Any value can be used for k • 10 is most common • Depends on the data set

  35. Leave-One-Out Cross Validation • Extreme case of k-fold cross validation • With N data examples perform N experiments with N-1 training cases and 1 test case Total number of available examples K = 0 K = 1 K = 2 K = N

  36. Classifier Accuracy • The accuracy of a classifier on a given test set is the percentage of test set tuples that are correctly classified by the classifier • Often also referred to as recognition rate • Error rate (or misclassification rate) is the opposite of accuracy

  37. False Positives Vs False Negatives • While it is useful to generate the simple accuracy of a classifier, sometimes we need more • When is the classifier wrong? • False positives vs false negatives • Related to type I and type II errors in statistics • Often there is a different cost associated with false positives and false negatives • Think about diagnosing diseases

  38. Confusion Matrix • Device used to illustrate how a classifier is performing in terms of false positives and false negatives • Gives us more information than a single accuracy figure • Allows us to think about the cost of mistakes • Can be extended to any number of classes

  39. Other Accuracy Measures • Sometimes a simple accuracy measure is not enough

  40. ROC Curves • Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were originally used to make sense of noisy radio signals • Can be used to help us talk about classifier performance and determine the best operating point for a classifier

  41. 1.0 True Positives 0 1.0 False Positives ROC Curves (cont…) • Consider how the relationship between true positives and false positives can change • We need to choose the best operating point For some great ROC curve examples have a look here

  42. 1.0 True Positives 0 1.0 False Positives ROC Curves (cont…) • ROC curves can be used to compare classifiers • The greater the area under the curve the more accurate the classifier

  43. Over-Fitting • When we train a classifier we are trying to a learn a function approximated by the training data we happen to use • What if the training data doesn’tcover the whole problem space? • We can learn the training data too closely which hampers the ability to generalise • This problem is known as overfitting • Depending on the type of classifier used there are different approaches to avoiding this

  44. Classifier0 Classifier1 Aggregation Classifiern Ensembles • In order to improve classification accuracy we can aggregate the results of an ensemble of classifiers

  45. Bagging • Given a set S of s samples • Generate a bootstrap sample T from S • Cases in S may not appear in T or may appear more than once • Repeat this sampling procedure, getting a sequence of k independent training sets • A corresponding sequence of classifiers C1,C2,…,Ck is constructed for each of these training sets, by using the same classification algorithm

  46. Bagging (cont…) • To classify an unknown sample X,let each classifier predict or vote • The Bagged Classifier C* counts the votes and assigns X to the class with the “most” votes

  47. Boosting Technique — Algorithm • Assign every example an equal weight 1/N • For t = 1, 2, …, T Do • Obtain a hypothesis (classifier) h(t) under w(t) • Calculate the error of h(t) and re-weight the examples based on the error . Each classifier is dependent on the previous ones. Samples that are incorrectly predicted are weighted more heavily • Normalize w(t+1) to sum to 1 (weights assigned to different classifiers sum to 1) • Output a weighted sum of all the hypothesis, with each hypothesis weighted according to its accuracy on the training set

  48. Summary • Classification is an extensively studied problem • Mainly in statistics and machine learning • Classification is probably one of the most widely used data mining techniques • Scalability is still an important issue for database applications • Research directions: classification of non-relational data, e.g., text, spatial, multimedia, etc..

  49. Questions? • ?

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