19-Introduction classification algorithm-18-09-2024
19-Introduction classification algorithm-18-09-2024
Warehousing and
Data Mining
Module 4 —Classification
Presented by
Dr. Siddique Ibrahim
SCOPE
VIT-AP University
1
Lecture Agenta
1. Model building
2. Model used for classification
1. Model building
It constructed by analyzing database tuples described
by attributes.
Each tuple is assigned with predefined class, one of
attributes, called class label attribute.
Data tuples are called as samples, examples or objects.
The individual tuples making up the training set are
referred to as training samples and are randomly
selected from sample population.
Since the class label of each training sample is
provided, this step is called supervised learning.
DATASET
Supervised vs. Unsupervised
Learning
Supervised learning (classification)
Supervision: The training data (observations,
measurements, etc.) are accompanied by labels indicating
the class of the observations
New data is classified based on the training set
Unsupervised learning (clustering)
The class labels of training data is unknown
Given a set of measurements, observations, etc. with the
aim of establishing the existence of classes or clusters in
the data
1. Model building
Typically, the learned model is represented in the form
of classification rules, decision tree, or mathematical
formula.
Different types of data splitting
methods
Train/Test Split. This is the simplest method. ...
K-Fold Cross Validation. This method involves splitting
the data into 'k' subsets. ...
Stratified K-Fold Cross Validation. ...
Time Series Split. ...
Leave One Out Cross Validation (LOOCV) ...
Stratified Sampling.
Process (1): Model
Construction
Classification
Algorithms
Training
Data
or missing values
Typical applications
Credit/loan approval:
mathematical formulae
Model usage: for classifying future or unknown objects
Estimate accuracy of the model
The known label of test sample is compared with the classified
result from the model
Accuracy rate is the percentage of test set samples that are
correctly classified by the model
Test set is independent of training set (otherwise overfitting)
If the accuracy is acceptable, use the model to classify new data
Note: If the test set is used to select models, it is called validation (test) set
Hold Out Method
Process (2): Using the Model in
Prediction
Classifier
Testing
Data Unseen Data
(Jeff, Professor, 4)
NAME RANK YEARS TENURED
Tom Assistant Prof 2 no Tenured?
Merlisa Associate Prof 7 no
George Professor 5 yes
Joseph Assistant Prof 7 yes
Accuracy Prediction
The accuracy of a model on a given test set is the
percentage of test set samples that are correctly
classified by the model.
no yes no yes
Algorithm for Decision Tree
Induction
Basic algorithm (a greedy algorithm)
Tree is constructed in a top-down recursive divide-and-conquer
manner
At start, all the training examples are at the root
discretized in advance)
Examples are partitioned recursively based on selected
attributes
Test attributes are selected on the basis of a heuristic or
m=2
Attribute Selection Measure:
Information Gain (ID3/C4.5)
Select the attribute with the highest information gain
Let pi be the probability that an arbitrary tuple in D belongs to
class Ci, estimated by |Ci, D|/|D|
Expected information (entropy) needed to classify
m a tuple in D:
Info ( D) pi log 2 ( pi )
i 1
Information needed (after using A to split D into v partitions) to
v | D |
classify D:
Info A ( D )
j
Info ( D j )
j 1 | D |
Information gained by branching on attribute A
Gain(A) Info(D) Info A(D)
Attribute Selection: Information
Gain
g Class P: buys_computer = “yes” 5 4
Info age ( D ) I (2,3) I (4,0)
g Class N: buys_computer = “no” 14 14
9 9 5 5 5
Info ( D) I (9,5) log 2 ( ) log 2 ( ) 0.940 I (3,2) 0.694
14 14 14 14 14
age pi ni I(p i, n i) 5
<=30 2 3 0.971 I (2,3)means “age <=30” has 5 out of
14
31…40 4 0 0 14 samples, with 2 yes’es and 3
>40 3 2 0.971 no’s. Hence
age
<=30
income student credit_rating
high no fair
buys_computer
no
Gain(age) Info ( D ) Info age ( D ) 0.246
<=30 high no excellent no
31…40
>40
high
medium
no
no
fair
fair
yes
yes
Similarly,
>40 low yes fair yes
>40 low yes excellent no
31…40 low yes excellent yes Gain(income) 0.029
<=30 medium no fair no
<=30
>40
low
medium
yes
yes
fair
fair
yes
yes
Gain( student ) 0.151
<=30
31…40
medium
medium
yes
no
excellent
excellent
yes
yes Gain(credit _ rating ) 0.048
31…40 high yes fair yes
>40 medium no excellent no
for Continuous-Valued
Attributes
Let attribute A be a continuous-valued attribute
Must determine the best split point for A
Sort the value A in increasing order
Typically, the midpoint between each pair of adjacent values
is considered as a possible split point
(ai+ai+1)/2 is the midpoint between the values of ai and ai+1
The point with the minimum expected information
requirement for A is selected as the split-point for A
Split:
D1 is the set of tuples in D satisfying A ≤ split-point, and D2 is
the set of tuples in D satisfying A > split-point
Gain Ratio for Attribute
Selection (C4.5)
Information gain measure is biased towards attributes with a
large number of values
C4.5 (a successor of ID3) uses gain ratio to overcome the
problem (normalization to information gain)
v | Dj | | Dj |
SplitInfo A ( D ) log 2 ( )
j 1 |D| |D|
GainRatio(A) = Gain(A)/SplitInfo(A)
Ex.
noise or outliers
Poor accuracy for unseen samples
47
Presentation of Classification
Results
P ( X | C i ) g ( x k , Ci , C i )
Naïve Bayes Classifier: Training
Dataset
age income studentcredit_rating
buys_compu
<=30 high no fair no
Class: <=30 high no excellent no
C1:buys_computer = ‘yes’ 31…40 high no fair yes
C2:buys_computer = ‘no’ >40 medium no fair yes
>40 low yes fair yes
>40 low yes excellent no
Data to be classified:
31…40 low yes excellent yes
X = (age <=30,
<=30 medium no fair no
Income = medium, <=30 low yes fair yes
Student = yes >40 medium yes fair yes
Credit_rating = Fair) <=30 medium yes excellent yes
31…40 medium no excellent yes
31…40 high yes fair yes
>40 medium no excellent no
Naïve Bayes Classifier: An
Example age income studentcredit_rating
buys_comp
<=30 high no fair no
<=30 high no excellent no
31…40 high no fair yes
P(Ci): P(buys_computer = “yes”) = 9/14 = 0.643 >40
>40
>40
medium
low
low
no fair
yes fair
yes excellent
yes
yes
no
“uncorrected” counterparts
Naïve Bayes Classifier: Comments
Advantages
Easy to implement
Disadvantages
Assumption: class conditional independence, therefore loss of
accuracy
Practically, dependencies exist among variables
E.g., hospitals: patients: Profile: age, family history, etc.
Symptoms: fever, cough etc., Disease: lung cancer,
diabetes, etc.
Dependencies among these cannot be modeled by Naïve
Bayes Classifier
How to deal with these dependencies? Bayesian Belief Networks
(Chapter 9)
Chapter 8. Classification: Basic
Concepts
Classification: Basic Concepts
Decision Tree Induction
Bayes Classification Methods
Rule-Based Classification
Model Evaluation and Selection
Techniques to Improve Classification Accuracy:
Ensemble Methods
Summary
61
Using IF-THEN Rules for
Classification
Represent the knowledge in the form of IF-THEN rules
R: IF age = youth AND student = yes THEN buys_computer = yes
Rule antecedent/precondition vs. rule consequent
no yes
prediction no yes
Each time a rule is learned, the tuples covered by the rules are
removed
Repeat the process on the remaining tuples until termination
Examples covered
Examples covered by Rule 2
by Rule 1 Examples covered
by Rule 3
Positive
examples
Rule Generation
To generate a rule
while(true)
find the best predicate p
if foil-gain(p) > threshold then add p to current rule
else break
A3=1&&A1=2
A3=1&&A1=2
&&A8=5A3=1
Positive Negative
examples examples
How to Learn-One-Rule?
Start with the most general rule possible: condition = empty
Adding new attributes by adopting a greedy depth-first strategy
Picks the one that most improves the rule quality
69
Classifier Evaluation Metrics:
Confusion Matrix
Confusion Matrix:
Actual class\Predicted class C1 ¬ C1
C1 True Positives (TP) False Negatives (FN)
¬ C1 False Positives (FP) True Negatives (TN)
71
Precision and Recall, and F-
measures
Precision: exactness – what % of tuples that the classifier
labeled as positive are actually positive
Fß: weighted measure of precision and recall
assigns ß times as much weight to recall as to precision
72
Classifier Evaluation Metrics:
Example
73
Holdout & Cross-Validation
Methods
Holdout method
Given data is randomly partitioned into two independent sets
Training set (e.g., 2/3) for model construction
Test set (e.g., 1/3) for accuracy estimation
Random sampling: a variation of holdout
Repeat holdout k times, accuracy = avg. of the accuracies
obtained
Cross-validation (k-fold, where k = 10 is most popular)
Randomly partition the data into k mutually exclusive subsets,
each approximately equal size
At i-th iteration, use Di as test set and others as training set
Leave-one-out: k folds where k = # of tuples, for small sized
data
*Stratified cross-validation*: folds are stratified so that class
dist. in each fold is approx. the same as that in the initial data
74
Evaluating Classifier Accuracy:
Bootstrap
Bootstrap
Works well with small data sets
Samples the given training tuples uniformly with replacement
i.e., each time a tuple is selected, it is equally likely to be selected
again and re-added to the training set
Several bootstrap methods, and a common one is .632 boostrap
A data set with d tuples is sampled d times, with replacement, resulting in
a training set of d samples. The data tuples that did not make it into the
training set end up forming the test set. About 63.2% of the original data
end up in the bootstrap, and the remaining 36.8% form the test set (since
(1 – 1/d)d ≈ e-1 = 0.368)
Repeat the sampling procedure k times, overall accuracy of the model:
75
Estimating Confidence Intervals:
Classifier Models M1 vs. M2
Suppose we have 2 classifiers, M1 and M2, which one is better?
Use 10-fold cross-validation to obtain and
These mean error rates are just estimates of error on the true
population of future data cases
What if the difference between the 2 error rates is just
attributed to chance?
Use a test of statistical significance
Obtain confidence limits for our error estimates
76
Estimating Confidence Intervals:
Null Hypothesis
Perform 10-fold cross-validation
Assume samples follow a t distribution with k–1 degrees of
freedom (here, k=10)
Use t-test (or Student’s t-test)
Null Hypothesis: M1 & M2 are the same
If we can reject null hypothesis, then
we conclude that the difference between M1 & M2 is
statistically significant
Chose model with lower error rate
77
Estimating Confidence Intervals: t-test
Symmetric
Significance level,
e.g., sig = 0.05 or
5% means M1 & M2
are significantly
different for 95% of
population
Confidence limit, z
= sig/2
79
Estimating Confidence Intervals:
Statistical Significance
Are M1 & M2 significantly different?
Compute t. Select significance level (e.g. sig = 5%)
Consult table for t-distribution: Find t value corresponding to
k-1 degrees of freedom (here, 9)
t-distribution is symmetric: typically upper % points of
distribution shown → look up value for confidence limit
z=sig/2 (here, 0.025)
If t > z or t < -z, then t value lies in rejection region:
Reject null hypothesis that mean error rates of M & M
1 2
are same
Conclude: statistically significant difference between M
1
& M2
Otherwise, conclude that any difference is chance
80
Model Selection: ROC
Curves
ROC (Receiver Operating
Characteristics) curves: for visual
comparison of classification models
Originated from signal detection theory
Shows the trade-off between the true
positive rate and the false positive rate
The area under the ROC curve is a Vertical axis
measure of the accuracy of the model represents the true
positive rate
Rank the test tuples in decreasing Horizontal axis rep.
order: the one that is most likely to the false positive rate
belong to the positive class appears at The plot also shows a
the top of the list diagonal line
The closer to the diagonal line (i.e., the A model with perfect
closer the area is to 0.5), the less accuracy will have an
accurate is the model area of 1.0
81
Issues Affecting Model Selection
Accuracy
classifier accuracy: predicting class label
Speed
time to construct the model (training time)
time to use the model (classification/prediction time)
Robustness: handling noise and missing values
Scalability: efficiency in disk-resident databases
Interpretability
understanding and insight provided by the model
Other measures, e.g., goodness of rules, such as decision tree
size or compactness of classification rules
82
Chapter 8. Classification: Basic
Concepts
Classification: Basic Concepts
Decision Tree Induction
Bayes Classification Methods
Rule-Based Classification
Model Evaluation and Selection
Techniques to Improve Classification Accuracy:
Ensemble Methods
Summary
83
Ensemble Methods: Increasing the
Accuracy
Ensemble methods
Use a combination of models to increase accuracy
classifiers
Boosting: weighted vote with a collection of classifiers
84
Bagging: Boostrap Aggregation
Analogy: Diagnosis based on multiple doctors’ majority vote
Training
Given a set D of d tuples, at each iteration i, a training set D of d tuples is
i
sampled with replacement from D (i.e., bootstrap)
A classifier model M is learned for each training set D
i i
Classification: classify an unknown sample X
Each classifier M returns its class prediction
i
The bagged classifier M* counts the votes and assigns the class with the
most votes to X
Prediction: can be applied to the prediction of continuous values by taking
the average value of each prediction for a given test tuple
Accuracy
Often significantly better than a single classifier derived from D
85
Boosting
Analogy: Consult several doctors, based on a combination of
weighted diagnoses—weight assigned based on the previous
diagnosis accuracy
How boosting works?
Weights are assigned to each training tuple
A series of k classifiers is iteratively learned
After a classifier Mi is learned, the weights are updated to
allow the subsequent classifier, Mi+1, to pay more attention to
the training tuples that were misclassified by Mi
The final M* combines the votes of each individual classifier,
where the weight of each classifier's vote is a function of its
accuracy
Boosting algorithm can be extended for numeric prediction
Comparing with bagging: Boosting tends to have greater accuracy,
but it also risks overfitting the model to misclassified data 86
Adaboost (Freund and Schapire,
1997)
Given a set of d class-labeled tuples, (X1, y1), …, (Xd, yd)
Initially, all the weights of tuples are set the same (1/d)
Generate k classifiers in k rounds. At round i,
Tuples from D are sampled (with replacement) to form a training set Di
of the same size
Each tuple’s chance of being selected is based on its weight
A classification model Mi is derived from Di
Its error rate is calculated using Di as a test set
If a tuple is misclassified, its weight is increased, o.w. it is decreased
Error rate: err(Xj) is the misclassification error of tuple Xj. Classifier Mi error
rate is the sum of the weights of the misclassified tuples:
d
error ( M i ) w j err ( X j )
j
returned
Two Methods to construct Random Forest:
Forest-RI (random input selection): Randomly select, at each node, F
attributes as candidates for the split at the node. The CART methodology
is used to grow the trees to maximum size
Forest-RC (random linear combinations): Creates new attributes (or
class
Threshold-moving: moves the decision threshold, t, so that
the rare class tuples are easier to classify, and hence, less
chance of costly false negative errors
Ensemble techniques: Ensemble multiple classifiers
introduced above
Still difficult for class imbalance problem on multiclass tasks
89
Chapter 8. Classification: Basic
Concepts
91
Summary (II)
Significance tests and ROC curves are useful for model selection.
There have been numerous comparisons of the different
classification methods; the matter remains a research topic
No single method has been found to be superior over all others
for all data sets
Issues such as accuracy, training time, robustness, scalability,
and interpretability must be considered and can involve trade-
offs, further complicating the quest for an overall superior
method
92
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96
CS412 Midterm Exam Statistics
Opinion Question Answering:
Like the style: 70.83%, dislike: 29.16%
80-89: 54
50-59: 15
70-79: 46
40-49: 2
Speed
time to construct the model (training time)
99
Predictor Error Measures
Measure predictor accuracy: measure how far off the predicted value is from
the actual known value
Loss function: measures the error betw. yi and the predicted value yi’
Absolute error: | yi – yi’|
Squared error: (yi – yi’)2
Test error (generalization error):
d the average loss over the test setd
Mean absolute error:
| y y '|
Mean squared error:
i 1
i i (y
i 1
i yi ' ) 2
d d
d
d
| y yi ' | ( yi yi ' ) 2
Relative absolute error: Relative squared error:
i
i 1 i 1
d d
| y
i 1
i y|
(y
i 1
i y)2
tree earlier
RainForest (VLDB’98 — Gehrke, Ramakrishnan & Ganti)
Builds an AVC-list (attribute, value, class label)
101
Data Cube-Based Decision-Tree
Induction
Integration of generalization with decision-tree induction
(Kamber et al.’97)
Classification at primitive concept levels
E.g., precise temperature, humidity, outlook, etc.
Low-level concepts, scattered classes, bushy classification-
trees
Semantic interpretation problems
Cube-based multi-level classification
Relevance analysis at multi-levels
Information-gain analysis with dimension + level
102