Explaining mixture models through semantic pattern mining and banded matrix visualization

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Abstract

Semi-automated data analysis is possible for the end user if data analysis processes are supported by easily accessible tools and methodologies for pattern/model construction, explanation, and exploration. The proposed three–part methodology for multiresolution 0–1 data analysis consists of data clustering with mixture models, extraction of rules from clusters, as well as data, cluster, and rule visualization using banded matrices. The results of the three-part process—clusters, rules from clusters, and banded structure of the data matrix—are finally merged in a unified visual banded matrix display. The incorporation of multiresolution data is enabled by the supporting ontology, describing the relationships between the different resolutions, which is used as background knowledge in the semantic pattern mining process of descriptive rule induction. The presented experimental use case highlights the usefulness of the proposed methodology for analyzing complex DNA copy number amplification data, studied in previous research, for which we provide new insights in terms of induced semantic patterns and cluster/ pattern visualization.

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APA

Adhikari, P. R., Hollmén, J., Vavpetič, A., Kralj, J., & Lavrač, N. (2014). Explaining mixture models through semantic pattern mining and banded matrix visualization. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 8777, pp. 1–12). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11812-3_1

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