Visual Data Mining from Visualization to Visual Information Mining

Visual Data Mining from Visualization to Visual Information Mining

Herna L. Viktor, Eric Paquet
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 6
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-010-3.ch314
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Abstract

The current explosion of data and information, which are mainly caused by the continuous adoption of data warehouses and the extensive use of the Internet and its related technologies, has increased the urgent need for the development of techniques for intelligent data analysis. Data mining, which concerns the discovery and extraction of knowledge chunks from large data repositories, addresses this need. Data mining automates the discovery of hidden patterns and relationships that may not always be obvious. Data mining tools include classification techniques (such as decision trees, rule induction programs and neural networks) (Kou et al., 2007); clustering algorithms and association rule approaches, amongst others. Data mining has been fruitfully used in many of domains, including marketing, medicine, finance, engineering and bioinformatics. There still are, however, a number of factors that militate against the widespread adoption and use of this new technology. This is mainly due to the fact that the results of many data mining techniques are often difficult to understand. For example, the results of a data mining effort producing 300 pages of rules will be difficult to analyze. The visual representation of the knowledge embedded in such rules will help to heighten the comprehensibility of the results. The visualization of the data itself, as well as the data mining process should go a long way towards increasing the user’s understanding of and faith in the data mining process. That is, data and information visualization provide users with the ability to obtain new insights into the knowledge, as discovered from large repositories. This paper describes a number of important visual data mining issues and introduces techniques employed to improve the understandability of the results of data mining. Firstly, the visualization of data prior to, and during, data mining is addressed. Through data visualization, the quality of the data can be assessed throughout the knowledge discovery process, which includes data preprocessing, data mining and reporting. We also discuss information visualization, i.e. how the knowledge, as discovered by a data mining tool, may be visualized throughout the data mining process. This aspect includes visualization of the results of data mining as well as the learning process. In addition, the paper shows how virtual reality and collaborative virtual environments may be used to obtain an immersive perspective of the data and the data mining process as well as how visual data mining can be used to directly mine functionality with specific applications in the emerging field of proteomics.
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Background

Human beings intuitively search for novel features, patterns, trends, outliers and relationships in data (Han and Kamber, 2006). Through visualizing the data and the concept descriptions obtained (e.g., in the form of rules), a qualitative overview of large and complex data sets can be obtained. In addition, data and rule visualization can assist in identifying regions of interest and appropriate parameters for more focused quantitative analysis. The user can thus get a “rough feeling” of the quality of the data, in terms of its correctness, adequacy, completeness, relevance, etc. The use of data and rule visualization thus greatly expands the range of models that can be understood by the user, thereby easing the so-called “accuracy versus understandability” tradeoff (Valdes and Barton, 2007).

Data mining techniques construct a model of the data through repetitive calculation to find statistically significant relationships within the data. However, the human visual perception system can detect patterns within the data that are unknown to a data mining tool. This combination of the various strengths of the human visual system and data mining tools may subsequently lead to the discovery of novel insights and the improvement of the human’s perspective of the problem at hand. Visual data mining harnesses the power of the human vision system, making it an effective tool to comprehend data distribution, patterns, clusters and outliers in data (Blanchard et al., 2007).

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