0% found this document useful (0 votes)
118 views30 pages

Chapter 3: Data Preprocessing

This chapter discusses data preprocessing techniques. It covers data cleaning which involves handling missing, noisy, and inconsistent data. Common techniques are filling in missing values, smoothing noisy data, and resolving inconsistencies. It also covers data integration which combines multiple data sources and resolving conflicts. Data reduction techniques like dimensionality and numerosity reduction are also covered. The chapter concludes with an overview of data transformation and discretization.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
118 views30 pages

Chapter 3: Data Preprocessing

This chapter discusses data preprocessing techniques. It covers data cleaning which involves handling missing, noisy, and inconsistent data. Common techniques are filling in missing values, smoothing noisy data, and resolving inconsistencies. It also covers data integration which combines multiple data sources and resolving conflicts. Data reduction techniques like dimensionality and numerosity reduction are also covered. The chapter concludes with an overview of data transformation and discretization.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 30

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
1
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?

2
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

3
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
4
Data Cleaning
 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)

 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?

5
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 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
 not register history or changes of the data
 Missing data may need to be inferred
6
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?
 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
7
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

8
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)

9
Data Cleaning as a Process
 Data discrepancy detection
 Use metadata (e.g., domain, range, dependency, distribution)

 Check field overloading

 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


 Data auditing: by analyzing data to discover rules and relationship to

detect violators (e.g., correlation and clustering to find outliers)


 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) – tool that integrates

discrepancy detection and transformation 10


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
11
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
12
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 able to be detected by
correlation analysis and covariance analysis
 Careful integration of the data from multiple sources may help
reduce/avoid redundancies and inconsistencies and improve
mining speed and quality
13
Correlation Analysis (Nominal Data)
 Χ2 (chi-square) test
(Observed  Expected) 2
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

14
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

 Expected : 1st col = (300*450)/1500 = 90


 Χ2 (chi-square) calculation (numbers in parenthesis are expected
counts calculated based on the data distribution in the two
categories)
(250  90) 2 (50  210) 2 (200  360) 2 (1000  840) 2
 
2
    507.93
90 210 360 840

 It shows that like_science_fiction and play_chess are correlated


in the group 15
 Degree of Freedom :

 (r-1)(c-1)
 Level of Significance:
 Chi square > los : reject null hypothesis
 Reject or accept the null hypothesis

4/9/2019 Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques 16


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
 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 17
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.


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
19
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.
 Data reduction strategies
 Dimensionality reduction, e.g., remove unimportant attributes

 Wavelet transforms

 Principal Components Analysis (PCA)

 Feature subset selection, feature creation

 Numerosity reduction , e.g., replace – data – by smaller forms

 Regression and Log-Linear Models (Parametric)

 Histograms, clustering, sampling (Non parametric)

 Data cube aggregation

 Data compression (lossless and lossy)

20
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

21
Heuristic Search in Attribute Selection

 There are 2d possible attribute combinations of d attributes


 Typical heuristic attribute selection methods:
 Best single attribute under the attribute independence

assumption: choose by significance tests


 Best step-wise feature selection:

 The best single-attribute is picked first

 Then next best attribute condition to the first, ...

 Step-wise attribute elimination:

 Repeatedly eliminate the worst attribute

 Best combined attribute selection and elimination

 Optimal branch and bound:

 Use attribute elimination and backtracking

22
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,

manifold approaches (not covered)


 Attribute construction

 Combining features (see: discriminative frequent

patterns in Chapter on “Advanced Classification”)


 Data discretization
23
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
24
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
25
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, 1.0].
73,000  12,000
Then $73,000 is mapped to (1.0  0)  0  0.716
98,000  12,000

 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  1.225
16,000
 Normalization by decimal scaling
v
v'  j Where j is the smallest integer such that Max(|ν’|) < 1
10
26
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
27
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
28
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

29
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
30

You might also like