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Characterizing Discriminative Patterns

Discriminative patterns are association patterns that occur with disproportionate frequency in some classes versus others, and have been studied under names such as emerging patterns and contrast sets. Such patterns have demonstrated considerable value for classification and subgroup discovery, but a detailed understanding of the types of interactions among items in a discriminative pattern is lacking. To address this issue, we propose to categorize discriminative patterns according to four types of item interaction: (i) driver-passenger, (ii) coherent, (iii) independent additive and (iv) synergistic beyond independent additive. Either of the last three is of practical importance, with the latter two representing a gain in the discriminative power of a pattern over its subsets. Synergistic patterns are most restrictive, but perhaps the most interesting since they capture a cooperative effect. For domains such as genetic research, differentiating among these types of patterns is critical since each yields very different biological interpretations. For general domains, the characterization provides a novel view of the nature of the discriminative patterns in a dataset, which yields i

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Co-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipCo-authorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipAuthorshipTopic signalTopic signalTopic signalTopic signalAuthorshipAuthorshipWCharacterizing Discriminative P...preprint / 2011AGang FangResearcherAWen WangResearcherABenjamin OatleyResearcherABrian Van NessResearcherTInformation Theory6710 worksTmath.IT6610 worksTDatabases1586 worksTGenomics360 worksAMichael SteinbachResearcherAVipin KumarResearcher
PaperSignal 1010 links

Characterizing Discriminative Patterns

preprint / 2011

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