FindOut: Finding Outliers in Very Large Datasets
Finding the rare instances or the outliers is important in many KDD (knowledge discovery
and data-mining) applications, such as detecting credit card fraud or finding irregularities in
gene expressions. Signal-processing techniques have been introduced to transform images
for enhancement, filtering, restoration, analysis, and reconstruction. In this paper, we present
a new method in which we apply signal-processing techniques to solve important problems
in data mining. In particular, we introduce a novel deviation (or outlier) detection approach …
and data-mining) applications, such as detecting credit card fraud or finding irregularities in
gene expressions. Signal-processing techniques have been introduced to transform images
for enhancement, filtering, restoration, analysis, and reconstruction. In this paper, we present
a new method in which we apply signal-processing techniques to solve important problems
in data mining. In particular, we introduce a novel deviation (or outlier) detection approach …
Abstract
Finding the rare instances or the outliers is important in many KDD (knowledge discovery and data-mining) applications, such as detecting credit card fraud or finding irregularities in gene expressions. Signal-processing techniques have been introduced to transform images for enhancement, filtering, restoration, analysis, and reconstruction. In this paper, we present a new method in which we apply signal-processing techniques to solve important problems in data mining. In particular, we introduce a novel deviation (or outlier) detection approach, termed FindOut, based on wavelet transform. The main idea in FindOut is to remove the clusters from the original data and then identify the outliers. Although previous research showed that such techniques may not be effective because of the nature of the clustering, FindOut can successfully identify outliers from large datasets. Experimental results on very large datasets are presented which show the efficiency and effectiveness of the proposed approach.
Springer