Advances in rough and soft clustering: Meta-clustering, dynamic clustering, data-stream clustering

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Abstract

Over the last five decades, clustering has established itself as a primary unsupervised learning technique. In most major data mining projects clustering can serve as a first step in understanding the available data. Clustering is used for creating meaningful profiles of entities in an application. It can also be used to compress the dataset into more manageable granules. The initial methods of crisp clustering objects represented using numeric attributes have evolved to address the demands of the real-world. These extensions include the use of soft computing techniques such as fuzzy and rough set theory, the use of centroids and medoids for computational efficiency, modes to accommodate categorical attributes, dynamic and stream clustering for managing continuous accumulation of data, and meta-clustering for correlating parallel clustering processes. This paper uses applications in engineering, web usage, retail, finance, and social networks to illustrate some of the recent advances in clustering and their role in improved profiling, as well as augmenting prediction, classification, association mining, dimensionality reduction, and optimization tasks.

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APA

Lingras, P., & Triff, M. (2016). Advances in rough and soft clustering: Meta-clustering, dynamic clustering, data-stream clustering. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 9920 LNAI, pp. 3–22). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-47160-0_1

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