Towards more accurate clustering method by using dynamic time warping
This work addresses efficiency issues for practitioners using HMMs and other ML methods on large datasets, though it is incremental as it builds on existing clustering and EM techniques.
The paper tackles the problem of slow training times for machine learning methods on large datasets by proposing a two-step process that clusters similar training instances using Dynamic Time Warping and modifies the EM algorithm for HMM training to include weight factors, achieving speedups of up to 2200 times on datasets of about 100,000 instances while preserving classification accuracy.
An intrinsic problem of classifiers based on machine learning (ML) methods is that their learning time grows as the size and complexity of the training dataset increases. For this reason, it is important to have efficient computational methods and algorithms that can be applied on large datasets, such that it is still possible to complete the machine learning tasks in reasonable time. In this context, we present in this paper a more accurate simple process to speed up ML methods. An unsupervised clustering algorithm is combined with Expectation, Maximization (EM) algorithm to develop an efficient Hidden Markov Model (HMM) training. The idea of the proposed process consists of two steps. In the first step, training instances with similar inputs are clustered and a weight factor which represents the frequency of these instances is assigned to each representative cluster. Dynamic Time Warping technique is used as a dissimilarity function to cluster similar examples. In the second step, all formulas in the classical HMM training algorithm (EM) associated with the number of training instances are modified to include the weight factor in appropriate terms. This process significantly accelerates HMM training while maintaining the same initial, transition and emission probabilities matrixes as those obtained with the classical HMM training algorithm. Accordingly, the classification accuracy is preserved. Depending on the size of the training set, speedups of up to 2200 times is possible when the size is about 100.000 instances. The proposed approach is not limited to training HMMs, but it can be employed for a large variety of MLs methods.