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Data Mining vs. Statistics

Data Mining vs. Statistics. Pavel Brusilovsky. Objectives. Intro to Data Mining Data Mining vs. Statistics Data Mining vs. Text Mining Applications of Data Mining. 2. Data Mining. Data Mining

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Data Mining vs. Statistics

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  1. Data Mining vs. Statistics Pavel Brusilovsky

  2. Objectives • Intro to Data Mining • Data Mining vs. Statistics • Data Mining vs. Text Mining • Applications of Data Mining 2

  3. Data Mining • Data Mining • is a cutting edge technology to analyze diverse, multidisciplinary and multidimensional complex data • Data mining could identify relationships in your multidimensional and heterogeneous data that cannot be identified in any other way • Successful application of state-of-the-art data mining technology to marketing and sales is indicative of analytic maturity and the success of a company • Working definition of Data Mining: • Data Mining is a process of discovering previously unknown and potentially useful hidden pattern in your data 3

  4. What is the Taxonomy of Data Mining? • Data mining taxonomy, based on application • Data Mining • Text Mining • Web Mining • Image Mining… • Data mining taxonomy, based on the usage of domain knowledge: • Verification-driven data mining • Is associated with traditional quantitative approaches that permit a decision maker to express and verify organizational and personal domain knowledge • Discovery driven data Mining • It tied with knowledge discovery technology capable of automatically discovering previously unknown patterns hidden in the data • Combination of both classes leads to synergy that can produce meaningful and reliable results that may not be obtained within the framework of each class of data mining independently • Data mining taxonomy, based on estimation paradigm: • supervised learning • unsupervised learning 4

  5. What is the deference between “Search” and “Discover” Source: http://www.knowledgetechnologies.org/proceedings/presentations/treloar/nathantreloar.ppt 5

  6. Example: Amazon.com purchase suggestion Amazon.com increased sales by 15%, using data/text mining generated purchase suggestions 6

  7. Data Mining and Related Fields • Statistics: “The model is king” (Hand) • Data Mining: “The data is king” 7

  8. Is Data Mining extension of Statistics? • Data Mining and Statistics: mutual fertilization with convergence • Statistical Data Mining (Graduate course, George Mason University) • Statistical Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery (Hardcover) by Hamparsum Bozdogan (Editor) • An overview of Bayesian and frequentist issues that arise in multivariate statistical modeling involving data mining  • Data Mining with Stepwise Regression (Dean Foster, Wharton School) • use interactions to capture non-linearities • use Bonferroni adjustment to pick variables to include • use the sandwich estimator to get robust standard errors 8

  9. What are Data Mining Myths? • Myth 1: Data mining automatically discovers hidden pattern in your data • Myth 2: Data mining is design for business analysts who are not professional in quantitative fields • Myth 3: Data mining findings can be easily translated into decision-maker actions • Myth 4: Data mining encompasses decision analysis/decision support technology 9

  10. What are logical steps of Data Mining?SEMMA methodology (SAS Enterprise Miner) • The core process of conducting data mining study includes the following steps (SEMMA): • Sample • Explore • Modify • Model • Assess • SEMMA is a logical organization of the functional tool set of SAS Enterprise Miner for carrying out the core tasks of data mining • SEMMA is focused on the model development aspects of data mining 10

  11. CRoss-Industry Standard Process for Data Mining (CRISP-DM) SPSS Clementine • Six phases of CRISP-DM: • Business understanding • Data understanding • Data preparation • Modeling • Evaluation • Model deployment www.crips-dm.org 11

  12. Statistics vs. Data Mining: Concepts 12

  13. Statistics vs. Data Mining: Regression Modeling 13

  14. What is an unstructured problem? 14

  15. What are differences between Data/Text Mining and Statistics? • Statistical analysis is designed to deal with structured data in order to solve structured problem: • Results are software and researcher independent • Inference reflects statistical hypothesis testing • Data mining is designed to deal with structured data in order to solve unstructured business problems • Results are software and researcher dependent (absence of implementation standards) • Inference reflects computational properties of data mining algorithm at hand • Text mining is designed to deal with unstructured data in order to solve unstructured problems • Results are software and researcher dependent • Inference reflects computational properties and visualization capability of text mining algorithm at hand 15

  16. When data mining technology is appropriate? • Data mining technology is appropriate if: • The business problem is unstructured • Accurate prediction is more important than the explanation • The data include the mixture of interval, nominal, ordinal, count, and text variables, and the role and the number of non-numeric variables are essential • Among those variables there are a lot of irrelevant and redundant attributes • The relationship among variables could be non-linear with uncharacterizable nonlinearities • The data are highly heterogeneous with a large percentage of outliers, leverage points, and missing values • The sample size is relatively large • Important marketing and sales studies/projects have the majority of these features 16

  17. Accurate prediction is more important than the explanation 17

  18. What is Breiman Uncertainty Principle? • Breiman uncertainty principle: Accuracy * Interpretability = Breiman’s constant • Breiman uncertainty principle means that The higher method’s accuracy, the lower its interpretability, and vice versa 18

  19. What are great Data Mining Ideas? • Injecting randomness into function estimation procedure • Bagging (Breiman, 1996): • Apply the same unstable algorithm to different samples (with replacement) of the original data • Different samples yield different models • The average of the predictions of these models might be better than the predictions from any single model • Boosting (Friedman, Hastie, and Tibshirani (1999): • Each model is based on the same original data • The first individual model is fit to the original data • For the second model, subtract the predicted value from the original target value, and use the difference as the target value to train the second model • For the third model, subtract weighted average of the predictions from the original target value, and use the difference as the target value to train the third model, and so on. 19

  20. What are the best Data Mining Conferences? • Annual SAS Data Mining Technology Conference • The world’s largest data mining conference that balancing theory and practice • Annual International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD) • Sponsored by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAII) • Annual International Salford Systems Data Mining Conference • Focusing on solving real world challenges • Business Applications of CART, MARS, TreeNet, and Random Forrest • Keynote speakers: Jerome Friedman (Stanford University) and Leo Breiman (University of California, Berkeley) 20

  21. What are the best data mining tools? • Salford Systems’ Tools (CART, Random Forest, MARS, TreeNet) • SAS Enterprise Miner/Text Miner • SPSS Clementine • Megaputer Intelligence PolyAnalyst 21

  22. Reference (Data Mining) • Randall Matignon (2007), Neural Network Modeling Using SAS Enterprise Miner , SAS® Institute Inc. • David J. Hand, Data Mining: Statistics and More? The American Statistician, May 1998, Vol. 52 No. 2 http://www.amstat.org/publications/tas/hand.pdf • Friedman, J.H. 1997. Data Mining and Statistics. What’s connection? Proceedings of the 29th Symposium on the Interface: Computing Science and Statistics, May 1997, Houston, Texas • Doug Wielenga (2007), Identifying and Overcoming Common Data Mining Mistakes, SAS Global Forum Paper 073-2007 • Nathan Treloar (2002), Text Mining: Tools, Techniques, and Applications http://www.knowledgetechnologies.org/proceedings/presentations/treloar/nathantreloar.ppt. 22

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