1 / 54

A Brief Introduction to CRISP-DM

A Brief Introduction to CRISP-DM. The Hard Facts About Data. Enormous amounts of data are being stored in databases Businesses are increasingly becoming data-rich , yet, paradoxically, they remain knowledge-poor “ We are drowning in information, but starving for knowledge ” -John Naisbett

clieberman
Download Presentation

A Brief Introduction to CRISP-DM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Brief Introduction toCRISP-DM

  2. The Hard Facts About Data • Enormous amounts of data are being stored in databases • Businesses are increasingly becoming data-rich, yet, paradoxically, they remain knowledge-poor “We are drowning in information, but starving for knowledge” -John Naisbett • Unless it is used to improve business practices, data is a liability, not an asset • Standard data analysis techniques are useful but insufficient and may miss valuable insight

  3. Real Examples • Consider the enormous amounts of data generated • Transactional data by credit card companies • Searches on Google, Yahoo, and MSN • Clickstream (web) or other sensor data • Europe's Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) has 16 telescopes, each of which produces 1 Gigabit/second of astronomical data over a 25-day observation session • storage and analysis are a big problem • Walmart reported to have 24 Tera-byte DB (likely even larger now) • AT&T handles billions of calls per day • data cannot be stored -- analysis must be done on the fly • Social media data

  4. What Is Data Mining?Business Definition • Deployment of business processes, supported by adequate analytical techniques, to: • Take further advantage of data • Discover RELEVANT knowledge • ACT on the results KDD is the non-trivial processof identifying valid, novel, potentially useful, and ultimately understandable patterns in data.

  5. Application Domains (I) • Direct marketing and retail • Behavior analysis, Offer targeting, Market basket analysis, Up-selling, etc. • Banks and financial institutions • Credit risk assessment, Fraud detection, Portfolio management, Forecasting, etc. • Telecommunications • Churn prediction, Product/service development, campaign management, fraud detection, etc.

  6. Application Domains (II) • Healthcare • Public health monitoring (infectious outbreaks, etc), Outcomes measurement (performance, cost, success rate, etc), Diagnostic help, etc. • Pharmaceutical industry / Bio-informatics • Biological activity prediction, Coding sequence discovery, Animal tests reduction, etc. • Insurances • Cross-selling, Risk analysis, Premium setting, Claims analysis, Fraud detection, etc.

  7. Application Domains (III) • Transports • Network management, Booking optimization, Customer service, etc. • Manufacturing • Load forecasting, Production management, Equipment monitoring, Quality management, etc. • Etc.

  8. Multidisciplinary Machine Learning Visualization Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery Business/Domain Knowledge Statistics Databases

  9. Data Mining Tasks • Summarization • Classification / Prediction • Classification, Concept learning, Regression • Clustering • Dependency modeling • Anomaly detection • Link Analysis

  10. Summarization • To find a compact description for a subset of the data. • Producing the average down time of all plant equipments in a given month, computing the total income generated by each sales representative per region per year • Techniques: • Statistics, Information theory, OLAP, etc.

  11. Prediction • To learn a function that associates a data item with the value of a response variable. If the response variable is discrete, we talk of classification learning; if the response variable is continuous, we talk of regression learning. • Assessing credit worthiness in a loan underwriting business, assessing the probability of response to a direct marketing campaign • Techniques: • Decision trees, Neural networks, Naïve Bayes, Support vector machines, Logistic regression, Nearest-neighbors, etc.

  12. Clustering • To identify a set of (meaningful) categories or clusters to describe the data. Clustering relies on some notion of similarity among data items and strives to maximize intra-cluster similarity whilst minimizing inter-cluster similarity. • Segmenting a business’ customer base, building a taxonomy of animals in a zoological application • Techniques: • K-Means, Hierarchical clustering, Kohonen SOM, etc.

  13. Dependency Modeling • To find a model that describes significant dependencies, associations or affinities among variables. • Analyzing market baskets in consumer goods retail, uncovering cause-effect relationships in medical treatments • Techniques: • Association rules, ILP, Graphical modeling, etc.

  14. Anomaly Detection • To discover the most significant changes in the data from previously measured or normative values. • Detecting fraudulent credit card usage, detecting anomalous turbine behavior in nuclear plants • Techniques: • Novelty detectors, Probability density models, etc.

  15. Data Mining Process • CRISP-DM: Cross-Industry Standard Process for Data Mining • Consortium effort involving: • NCR Systems Engineering Copenhagen • DaimlerChrysler AG • SPSS Inc. • OHRA Verzekeringen en Bank Groep B.V • History: • Version 1.0 released in 1999 • See www.crisp-dm.org for further details

  16. Visual Overview

  17. Summary: Phases & Tasks Data Understanding Business Understanding Data Preparation Modeling Deployment Evaluation Determine Business Objectives Background Business Objectives Business Success Criteria Situation Assessment Inventory of Resources Requirements, Assumptions, and Constraints Risks and Contingencies Terminology Costs and Benefits Determine Data Mining Goal Data Mining Goals Data Mining Success Criteria Produce Project Plan Project PlanInitial Asessment of Tools and Techniques Collect Initial Data Initial Data Collection Report Describe Data Data Description Report Explore Data Data Exploration Report Verify Data Quality Data Quality Report Data Set Data Set Description Select Data Rationale for Inclusion / Exclusion Clean Data Data Cleaning Report Construct Data Derived Attributes Generated Records Integrate Data Merged Data Format Data Reformatted Data Select Modeling Technique Modeling Technique Modeling Assumptions Generate Test Design Test Design Build Model Parameter Settings Models Model Description Assess Model Model AssessmentRevised Parameter Settings Evaluate Results Assessment of Data Mining Results w.r.t. Business Success Criteria Approved Models Review Process Review of Process Determine Next Steps List of Possible Actions Decision Plan Deployment Deployment Plan Plan Monitoring and Maintenance Monitoring and Maintenance Plan Produce Final Report Final Report Final Presentation Review Project Experience Documentation

  18. CRISP-DM Phases • Business Understanding • Initial phase • Focuses on: • Understanding the project objectives and requirements from a business perspective • Converting this knowledge into a data mining problem definition, and a preliminary plan designed to achieve the objectives • Data Understanding • Starts with an initial data collection • Proceeds with activities aimed at: • Getting familiar with the data • Identifying data quality problems • Discovering first insights into the data • Detecting interesting subsets to form hypotheses for hidden information

  19. CRISP-DM Phases • Data Preparation • Covers all activities to construct the final dataset (data that will be fed into the modeling tool(s)) from the initial raw data • Data preparation tasks are likely to be performed multiple times, and not in any prescribed order • Tasks include table, record, and attribute selection, as well as transformation and cleaning of data for modeling tools • Modeling • Various modeling techniques are selected and applied, and their parameters are calibrated to optimal values • Typically, there are several techniques for the same data mining problem type • Some techniques have specific requirements on the form of data, therefore, stepping back to the data preparation phase is often needed

  20. CRISP-DM Phases • Evaluation • At this stage, a model (or models) that appears to have high quality, from a data analysis perspective, has been built • Before proceeding to final deployment of the model, it is important to more thoroughly evaluate the model, and review the steps executed to construct the model, to be certain it properly achieves the business objectives • A key objective is to determine if there is some important business issue that has not been sufficiently considered • At the end of this phase, a decision on the use of the data mining results should be reached

  21. CRISP-DM Phases • Deployment • Creation of the model is generally not the end of the project • Even if the purpose of the model is to increase knowledge of the data, the knowledge gained will need to be organized and presented in a way that the customer can use it • Depending on the requirements, the deployment phase can be as simple as generating a report or as complex as implementing a repeatable data mining process • In many cases it will be the customer, not the data analyst, who will carry out the deployment steps • However, even if the analyst will not carry out the deployment effort it is important for the customer to understand up front what actions will need to be carried out in order to actually make use of the created models

  22. Monitoring The Missing Link Closing the Loop Changes in data Changes in environment How do I know my model remains valid and applicable? When should I update my model(s)? How do I update my model(s)?

  23. Data Mining Myths (I) • Data Mining produces surprising results that will utterly transform your business • Reality: • Early results = scientific confirmation of human intuition. • Beyond = steady improvement to an already successful organisation. • Occasionally = discovery of one of those rare « breakthrough » facts. • Data Mining techniques are so sophisticated that they can substitute for domain knowledge or for experience in analysis and model building • Reality: • Data Mining = joint venture. • Close cooperation between experts in modeling and using the associated techniques, and people who understand the business.

  24. Data Mining Myths (II) • Data Mining is useful only in certain areas, such as marketing, sales, and fraud detection • Reality: • Data mining is useful wherever data can be collected. • All that is really needed is data and a willingness to « give it a try. » There is little to loose… • Only massive databases are worth mining • Reality: • A moderately-sized or small data set can also yield valuable information. • It is not only the quantity, but also the quality of the data that matters (characterising mutagenic compounds)

  25. Data Mining Myths (III) • The methods used in Data Mining are fundamentally different from the older quantitative model-building techniques • Reality: • All methods now used in data mining are natural extensions and generalisations of analytical methods known for decades. • What is new in data mining is that we are now applying these techniques to more general business problems. • Data Mining is an extremely complex process • Reality: • The algorithms of data mining may be complex, but new tools and well-defined methodologies have made those algorithms easier to apply. • Much of the difficulty in applying data mining comes from the same dataorganisation issues that arise when using any modeling techniques.

  26. Food for Thought • “Data mining can't be ignored -- the data is there, the methods are numerous, and the advantages that knowledge discovery brings to a business are tremendous.” • “People who can't see the value in data mining as a concept either don't have the data or don't have data with integrity.” • “Data mining is quickly becoming a necessity, and those who do not do it will soon be left in the dust. Data mining is one of the few software activities with measurable return on investment associated with it.”

  27. Data Mining Deliverables • Provides additional insight about the data and the business • Provides scientific confirmation of empirical/intuitive business observations • Discovers new, subtle pieces of business knowledge In that order !

  28. Key Success Factors • Have a clearly articulated business problem that needs to be solved and for which Data Mining is the adequate technology • Ensure that the problem being pursued is supported by the right type of data of sufficient quality and in sufficient quantity • Recognise that Data Mining is a process with many components and dependencies • Plan to learn from the Data Mining process whatever the outcome

  29. Conclusion • Data Mining transforms data into actions • Data Mining is hard work • It is a process, not a single activity • Most companies are clueless and DM is an afterthought • Plan to learn through the process • Think big, start small • Data Mining is FUN!

  30. More on Data Mining • KDnuggets • News, software, jobs, courses, etc. • www.KDnuggets.com • ACM SIGKDD • Data mining association • www.acm.org/sigkdd

  31. Sample Applications

  32. Retail

  33. The Situation • Potential applications: • Associations of products that sell together • Segmentation of customers • Short audit: • Nice DWH, only 2 years old, not fully populated • Limited data on purchases and subscriptions

  34. Summarization / Aggregation • Revenue distribution • 80% generated by 41.5% of subscribers • 60% generated by 18.3% of subscribers • 42.9% generated by top 5 products • Simple customer classes • Over 65 years old most profitable • Under 16 years old least profitable • Birthdate filled-in for only about 10% of subscribers!

  35. Product Association • About 21% of subscribers buy P4, P7 and P9 • P4 is most profitable product • P7 is ranked 6th • P9 is ranked 15th with only 2% of revenue • Several possible actions • Make a bundle offering of these products • Cross-sell from P9 to P4 • Temptation to remove P9 should be resisted

  36. Clustering 30% of customers who buy a single yearly product !!!

  37. Summary of Findings • Data Mining found: • A small percentage of the customers is responsible for a large share of the sales • Several groups of « strongly-connected » articles • A sizeable group of subscribers who buy a single article • What was learned? • First 2 findings: « we knew that! » (BUT: scientific confirmation of business observation) • 3rd finding: « we could target these customers with a special offer! » • Lack of relevant data: the structure is in place but not being used systematically

  38. Family History

  39. Finding Affinities Metrics generally depend on the nature of the attribute (e.g., nominal, real, string)

  40. Star Wars Family Tree

  41. Total Affinities(Thicker lines indicate stronger affinities --- Highly connected group ) CHARACTERISTICS Name, Sex, Hometown, Occupation, Political Affiliation, Children

  42. More Than 2 Affinities CHARACTERISTICS Name, Sex, Hometown, Occupation, Political Affiliation, Children Seems to be an important link

  43. Stronger Affinity between Luke and Obi-Wan because they were both Jedi Knights and Jedi Masters Occupational Affinity Network Jedi Knights Moisture Farmers

  44. Birthday Networks(Two or more affinities) Duplicate individual Twins! Close relatives that share birthdays

  45. Given Name Network (One or more affinities) More neat Naming Patterns… Relatives sharing the same middle names Interesting! both husband and wife’s maternal grandfathers share the same first and middle names. Interesting Naming Pattern Through generations

  46. Record Linkage

  47. Record Linkage • The process of identifying similar people • Essential for exchanging and/or merging pedigrees • MAL4:6 uses the individuals and their relatives as found in their pedigrees

  48. Challenges • Each relationship/attribute is treated equally • Weights • Version 0.1 used feature selection instead of continuous weights • Weights would allow MAL4:6 to use all of the data in a pedigree to a degree (TBD by MAL4:6) • Naturally Skewed Data • #NonMatches >> #Matches • Learners tend to over learn the majority class

  49. Similarity • Attributes: A = {A1,A2,…An}, Ai would be a piece of information (e.g., date of birth) • For each Ai, simAi is the similarity metric associated with Ai • Let x = < A1 : a1x, A2 : a2x,…, An : anx > denote an individual where ajx is the value of Aj for x • <firstname: John, lastname: Smith,…> • Let R= {R0,R1,…Rm} be a set of functions that map an individual to one of its relatives

  50. Structured Network Match MisMatch i Spouse Individual Father Weights ij Similarity Scores

More Related