High Utility Interval-Based Sequences
This addresses the need for more informative pattern mining in domains with persistent events and varying utilities, though it appears incremental by extending existing sequential mining concepts.
The paper tackles the problem of mining sequential patterns from interval-based data with varying event utilities, proposing a framework and algorithm (HUIPMiner) that effectively identifies high-utility patterns in real datasets.
Sequential pattern mining is an interesting research area with broad range of applications. Most prior research on sequential pattern mining has considered point-based data where events occur instantaneously. However, in many application domains, events persist over intervals of time of varying lengths. Furthermore, traditional frameworks for sequential pattern mining assume all events have the same weight or utility. This simplifying assumption neglects the opportunity to find informative patterns in terms of utilities, such as cost. To address these issues, we incorporate the concept of utility into interval-based sequences and define a framework to mine high utility patterns in interval-based sequences i.e., patterns whose utility meets or exceeds a minimum threshold. In the proposed framework, the utility of events is considered while assuming multiple events can occur coincidentally and persist over varying periods of time. An algorithm named High Utility Interval-based Pattern Miner (HUIPMiner) is proposed and applied to real datasets. To achieve an efficient solution, HUIPMiner is augmented with a pruning strategy. Experimental results show that HUIPMiner is an effective solution to the problem of mining high utility interval-based sequences.