Free-rider Episode Screening via Dual Partition Model
This addresses the issue of pattern redundancy in data mining for practitioners, but it is incremental as it builds on existing partition models with more complex subepisodes.
The paper tackles the problem of filtering redundant free-rider episodes in frequent episode mining by developing a novel partition model (EDP) that divides episodes into real patterns and noise, and it demonstrates effective filtering on synthetic and real-world datasets compared to state-of-the-art methods.
One of the drawbacks of frequent episode mining is that overwhelmingly many of the discovered patterns are redundant. Free-rider episode, as a typical example, consists of a real pattern doped with some additional noise events. Because of the possible high support of the inside noise events, such free-rider episodes may have abnormally high support that they cannot be filtered by frequency based framework. An effective technique for filtering free-rider episodes is using a partition model to divide an episode into two consecutive subepisodes and comparing the observed support of such episode with its expected support under the assumption that these two subepisodes occur independently. In this paper, we take more complex subepisodes into consideration and develop a novel partition model named EDP for free-rider episode filtering from a given set of episodes. It combines (1) a dual partition strategy which divides an episode to an underlying real pattern and potential noises; (2) a novel definition of the expected support of a free-rider episode based on the proposed partition strategy. We can deem the episode interesting if the observed support is substantially higher than the expected support estimated by our model. The experiments on synthetic and real-world datasets demonstrate EDP can effectively filter free-rider episodes compared with existing state-of-the-arts.