Model-based Exception Mining for Object-Relational Data
This work addresses outlier detection in complex heterogeneous networks, such as soccer matches and movies, but it is incremental as it builds upon existing frameworks and methods.
The paper tackles the problem of exception mining and outlier detection for object-relational data, which has a complex heterogeneous structure, by extending the Exceptional Model Mining framework and introducing a new likelihood ratio metric based on probabilistic graphical models, achieving the best detection accuracy on synthetic and real-world datasets compared to baseline methods.
This paper is based on a previous publication [29]. Our work extends exception mining and outlier detection to the case of object-relational data. Object-relational data represent a complex heterogeneous network [12], which comprises objects of different types, links among these objects, also of different types, and attributes of these links. This special structure prohibits a direct vectorial data representation. We follow the well-established Exceptional Model Mining framework, which leverages machine learning models for exception mining: A object is exceptional to the extent that a model learned for the object data differs from a model learned for the general population. Exceptional objects can be viewed as outliers. We apply state of-the-art probabilistic modelling techniques for object-relational data that construct a graphical model (Bayesian network), which compactly represents probabilistic associations in the data. A new metric, derived from the learned object-relational model, quantifies the extent to which the individual association pattern of a potential outlier deviates from that of the whole population. The metric is based on the likelihood ratio of two parameter vectors: One that represents the population associations, and another that represents the individual associations. Our method is validated on synthetic datasets and on real-world data sets about soccer matches and movies. Compared to baseline methods, our novel transformed likelihood ratio achieved the best detection accuracy on all datasets.