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Finding Interesting Associations without Support Pruning

Authors :
Cohen, Edith
Datar, Mayur
Fujiwara, Shinji
Gionis, Aristides
Indyk, Piotr
Motwani, Rajeev
Ullman, Jeffrey D.
Yang, Cheng
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering. Jan, 2001, Vol. 13 Issue 1, 64
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

Association-rule mining has heretofore relied on the condition of high support to do its work efficiently. In particular, the well-known a priori algorithm is only effective when the only rules of interest are relationships that occur very frequently. However, there are a number of applications, such as data mining, identification of similar web documents, clustering, and collaborative filtering, where the rules of interest have comparatively few instances in the data. In these cases, we must look for highly correlated items, or possibly even causal relationships between infrequent items. We develop a family of algorithms for solving this problem, employing a combination of random sampling and hashing techniques. We provide analysis of the algorithms developed and conduct experiments on real and synthetic data to obtain a comparative performance analysis. Index Terms--Data mining, association rules, similarity metric, min hashing, locality sensitive hashing.

Details

ISSN :
10414347
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.71681847