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Introduction To Data Warehousing

1) Databases store data which is used for decision making. Data from different sources is often incompatible which makes analysis difficult. 2) Data warehouses integrate data from different sources to provide a unified view for analysis. They contain historical data organized by topics to support multi-dimensional analysis across time. 3) Online analytical processing (OLAP) tools access multidimensional data in data warehouses to enable interactive exploration and analysis of data through visualization and calculations.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
1K views53 pages

Introduction To Data Warehousing

1) Databases store data which is used for decision making. Data from different sources is often incompatible which makes analysis difficult. 2) Data warehouses integrate data from different sources to provide a unified view for analysis. They contain historical data organized by topics to support multi-dimensional analysis across time. 3) Online analytical processing (OLAP) tools access multidimensional data in data warehouses to enable interactive exploration and analysis of data through visualization and calculations.

Uploaded by

harrypunjabi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to

Datawarehousing
Databases
 Databases are developed on the IDEA
that DATA is one of the critical materials of
the Information Age
 Information, which is created by data,
becomes the bases for decision making
Problem: Heterogeneous Information
Sources
“Heterogeneities are
everywhere” Personal
Databases

World
Scientific Databases Wide
Web
Digital Libraries
♦ Different interfaces
♦ Different data representations
♦ Duplicate and inconsistent information
Problem: Data Management in Large
Enterprises
 Vertical fragmentation of informational
systems (vertical stove pipes)
 Result of application (user)-driven
development
Sales Planning
of operational systems
Suppliers Num. Control
Stock Mngmt Debt Mngmt Inventory
... ... ...

Sales Administration Finance Manufacturing ...


Decision Support Systems
 Created to facilitate the decision making
process
 So much information that it is difficult to
extract it all from a traditional database
 Need for a more comprehensive data
storage facility
 Data Warehouse
Goal: Unified Access to Data

Integration System

World
Wide
Personal
Web
Digital Libraries Scientific Databases Databases

• Collects and combines information


• Provides integrated view, uniform user interface
• Supports sharing
Generic Warehouse Architecture
Client Client
Query & Analysis

Design Phase Loading

Warehouse Metadata
Maintenance
Integrator Optimization

Extractor/ Extractor/ Extractor/


Monitor Monitor Monitor

...
Decision Support Systems
 Extract Information from data to use as the basis
for decision making
 Used at all levels of the Organization
 Tailored to specific business areas
 Interactive
 Ad Hoc queries to retrieve and display
information
 Combines historical operation data with
business activities
4 Components of DSS
 Data Store – The DSS Database
 Business Data
 Business Model Data
 Internal and External Data
 Data Extraction and Filtering
 Extractand validate data from the operational
database and the external data sources
4 Components of DSS
 End-User Query Tool
 Create Queries that access either the
Operational or the DSS database
 End User Presentation Tools
 Organize and Present the Data
Differences with DSS
 Operational
 Stored in Normalized Relational Database
 Support transactions that represent daily
operations (Not Query Friendly)
 3 Main Differences
 Time Span
 Granularity
 Dimensionality
Time Span
 Operational
 Real Time
 Current Transactions
 Short Time Frame
 Specific Data Facts
 DSS
 Historic
 Long Time Frame (Months/Quarters/Years)
 Patterns
Granularity
 Operational
 Specific Transactions that occur at a given
time
 DSS
 Shown at different levels of aggregation
 Different Summary Levels
 Decompose (drill down)
 Summarize (roll up)
Dimensionality
 Most distinguishing characteristic of DSS
data
 Operational
 Represents atomic transactions
 DSS
 Data is related in Many ways
 Develop the larger picture
 Multi-dimensional view of data
DSS Database Requirements
 DSS Database Scheme
 Support Complex and Non-Normalized data
 Summarized and Aggregate data
 Multiple Relationships

 Queries must extract multi-dimensional time slices

 Redundant Data
DSS Database Requirements
 Data Extraction and Filtering
 DSS databases are created mainly by extracting data
from operational databases combined with data
imported from external source
 Need for advanced data extraction & filtering tools
 Allow batch / scheduled data extraction
 Support different types of data sources
 Check for inconsistent data / data validation rules
 Support advanced data integration / data formatting conflicts
DSS Database Requirements
 End User Analytical Interface
 Must support advanced data modeling and data
presentation tools
 Data analysis tools
 Query generation
 Must Allow the User to Navigate through the DSS
 Size Requirements
 VERY Large – Terabytes
 Advanced Hardware (Multiple processors, multiple
disk arrays, etc.)
Data Warehouse
 DSS – friendly data repository for the DSS
is the DATA WAREHOUSE

 Definition: Integrated, Subject-Oriented,


Time-Variant, Nonvolatile database that
provides support for decision making
Integrated
 The data warehouse is a centralized,
consolidated database that integrated
data derived from the entire organization
 MultipleSources
 Diverse Sources
 Diverse Formats
Subject-Oriented
 Data is arranged and optimized to provide
answer to questions from diverse
functional areas
 Data is organized and summarized by topic
 Sales / Marketing / Finance / Distribution / Etc.
Time-Variant
 The Data Warehouse represents the flow
of data through time
 Can contain projected data from statistical
models
 Data is periodically uploaded then time-
dependent data is recomputed
Nonvolatile
 Once data is entered it is NEVER
removed
 Represents the company’s entire history
 Near term history is continually added to it
 Always growing
 Must support terabyte databases and
multiprocessors
 Read-Only database for data analysis and
query processing
Data Marts
 Small Data Stores
 More manageable data sets
 Targeted to meet the needs of small
groups within the organization

 Small, Single-Subject data warehouse


subset that provides decision support to a
small group of people
OLAP
 Online Analytical Processing Tools
 DSS tools that use multidimensional data
analysis techniques
 Support for a DSS data store
 Data extraction and integration filter
 Specialized presentation interface
12 Rules of a Data Warehouse
 Data Warehouse and Operational
Environments are Separated
 Data is integrated
 Contains historical data over a long period
of time
 Data is a snapshot data captured at a
given point in time
 Data is subject-oriented
12 Rules of Data Warehouse
 Mainly read-only with periodic batch
updates
 Development Life Cycle has a data driven
approach versus the traditional process-
driven approach
 Data contains several levels of detail
 Current,
Old, Lightly Summarized, Highly
Summarized
12 Rules of Data Warehouse
 Environment is characterized by Read-only
transactions to very large data sets
 System that traces data sources,
transformations, and storage
 Metadata is a critical component
 Source, transformation, integration, storage,
relationships, history, etc
 Contains a chargeback mechanism for resource
usage that enforces optimal use of data by end
users
OLAP
 Need for More Intensive Decision Support
 4 Main Characteristics
 Multidimensional data analysis
 Advanced Database Support
 Easy-to-use end-user interfaces
 Support Client/Server architecture
Multidimensional Data Analysis
Techniques
 Advanced Data Presentation Functions
 3-D graphics, Pivot Tables, Crosstabs, etc.
 Compatible with Spreadsheets & Statistical
packages
 Advanced data aggregations, consolidation
and classification across time dimensions
 Advanced computational functions
 Advanced data modeling functions
Advanced Database Support
 Advanced Data Access Features
 Access to many kinds of DBMS’s, flat files,
and internal and external data sources
 Access to aggregated data warehouse data
 Advanced data navigation (drill-downs and
roll-ups)
 Ability to map end-user requests to the
appropriate data source
 Support for Very Large Databases
Easy-to-Use End-User Interface
 Graphical User Interfaces
 Much more useful if access is kept simple
Client/Server Architecture
 Framework for the new systems to be
designed, developed and implemented
 Divide the OLAP system into several
components that define its architecture
 Same Computer
 Distributed among several computer
OLAP Architecture
 3 Main Modules
 GUI
 Analytical
Processing Logic
 Data-processing Logic
OLAP Client/Server
Architecture
Relational OLAP
 Relational Online Analytical Processing
 OLAP functionality using relational database
and familiar query tools to store and analyze
multidimensional data
 Multidimensional data schema support
 Data access language & query
performance for multidimensional data
 Support for Very Large Databases
Multidimensional Data Schema
Support
 Decision Support Data tends to be
 Nonnormalized
 Duplicated
 Preaggregated
 Star Schema
 Special Design technique for multidimensional
data representations
 Optimize data query operations instead of
data update operations
Star Schemas
 Data Modeling Technique to map
multidimensional decision support data
into a relational database
 Current Relational modeling techniques do
not serve the needs of advanced data
requirements
Star Schema
 4 Components
 Facts
 Dimensions
 Attributes
 Attribute Hierarchies
Facts
 Numeric measurements (values) that represent
a specific business aspect or activity
 Stored in a fact table at the center of the star
scheme
 Contains facts that are linked through their
dimensions
 Can be computed or derived at run time
 Updated periodically with data from operational
databases
Dimensions
 Qualifying characteristics that provide
additional perspectives to a given fact
 DSS data is almost always viewed in relation
to other data
 Dimensions are normally stored in
dimension tables
Attributes
 Dimension Tables contain Attributes
 Attributes are used to search, filter, or classify facts
 Dimensions provide descriptive characteristics about the
facts through their attributed
 Must define common business attributes that will be
used to narrow a search, group information, or describe
dimensions. (ex.: Time / Location / Product)
 No mathematical limit to the number of dimensions (3-D
makes it easy to model)
Attribute Hierarchies
 Provides a Top-Down data organization
 Aggregation
 Drill-down / Roll-Up data analysis
 Attributes from different dimensions can
be grouped to form a hierarchy
Star Schema for Sales
Dimension
Tables

Fact Table
Star Schema Representation
 Fact and Dimensions are represented by
physical tables in the data warehouse database
 Fact tables are related to each dimension table
in a Many to One relationship (Primary/Foreign
Key Relationships)
 Fact Table is related to many dimension tables
 The primary key of the fact table is a composite
primary key from the dimension tables
 Each fact table is designed to answer a specific
DSS question
Star Schema
 The fact table is always the larges table in
the star schema
 Each dimension record is related to
thousand of fact records
 Star Schema facilitated data retrieval
functions
 DBMS first searches the Dimension
Tables before the larger fact table
Data Warehouse
Implementation
 An Active Decision Support Framework
 Nota Static Database
 Always a Work in Process
 Complete Infrastructure for Company-Wide decision
support
 Hardware / Software / People / Procedures / Data
 Data Warehouse is a critical component of the
Modern DSS – But not the Only critical component
Data Mining
 Discover Previously unknown data
characteristics, relationships,
dependencies, or trends
 Typical Data Analysis Relies on end users
 Define the Problem
 Select the Data
 Initial the Data Analysis
 Reacts to External Stimulus
Data Mining
 Proactive
 Automatically searches
 Anomalies
 Possible Relationships
 Identify Problems before the end-user
 Data Mining tools analyze the data, uncover problems or
opportunities hidden in data relationships, form computer
models based on their findings, and then user the
models to predict business behavior – with minimal end-
user intervention
Data Mining
 A methodology designed to perform
knowledge-discovery expeditions over the
database data with minimal end-user
intervention
 3 Stages of Data
 Data
 Information
 Knowledge
Extraction of Knowledge from
Data
4 Phases of Data Mining
 Data Preparation
 Identify
the main data sets to be used by the data
mining operation (usually the data warehouse)
 Data Analysis and Classification
 Study the data to identify common data
characteristics or patterns
 Data groupings, classifications, clusters, sequences
 Data dependencies, links, or relationships
 Data patterns, trends, deviation
4 Phases of Data Mining
 Knowledge Acquisition
 Uses the Results of the Data Analysis and Classification phase
 Data mining tool selects the appropriate modeling or knowledge-
acquisition algorithms
 Neural Networks
 Decision Trees
 Rules Induction
 Genetic algorithms
 Memory-Based Reasoning
 Prognosis
 Predict Future Behavior
 Forecast Business Outcomes
 65% of customers who did not use a particular credit card in the last 6
months are 88% likely to cancel the account.
Data Mining
 Still a New Technique
 May find many Unmeaningful
Relationships
 Good at finding Practical Relationships
 DefineCustomer Buying Patterns
 Improve Product Development and
Acceptance
 Etc.
 Potential of becoming the next frontier in

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