Clustering

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A01=Boris Mirkin
advanced data mining
algorithm
AP
approach
Author_Boris Mirkin
Category=UNF
Category=UTFB
centroids
Cluster Centroids
Cluster Hierarchy
Cluster Structure
cluster validation techniques
Consensus Clustering
Consensus Matrix
Consensus Partition
contingency
data
Data Recovery Approach
Data Scatter
Data Set
Divisive Clustering
E1 E2 E3 E4 E5
entity
Entity Set
eq_bestseller
eq_computing
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
hierarchical partitioning
Initial Centroids
Merged Cluster
Minimum Distance Rule
modularity optimization
Mst
network analysis methods
ontology-based interpretation
Rayleigh Quotient
recovery
scatter
set
Similarity Matrix
Single Linkage Clustering
Split Parts
structure
Summary Similarity
unsupervised learning
Ward Agglomeration
Ward Clustering
Ward Distance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781439838419
  • Weight: 861g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Often considered more of an art than a science, books on clustering have been dominated by learning through example with techniques chosen almost through trial and error. Even the two most popular, and most related, clustering methods—K-Means for partitioning and Ward's method for hierarchical clustering—have lacked the theoretical underpinning required to establish a firm relationship between the two methods and relevant interpretation aids. Other approaches, such as spectral clustering or consensus clustering, are considered absolutely unrelated to each other or to the two above mentioned methods.

Clustering: A Data Recovery Approach, Second Edition presents a unified modeling approach for the most popular clustering methods: the K-Means and hierarchical techniques, especially for divisive clustering. It significantly expands coverage of the mathematics of data recovery, and includes a new chapter covering more recent popular network clustering approaches—spectral, modularity and uniform, additive, and consensus—treated within the same data recovery approach. Another added chapter covers cluster validation and interpretation, including recent developments for ontology-driven interpretation of clusters. Altogether, the insertions added a hundred pages to the book, even in spite of the fact that fragments unrelated to the main topics were removed.

Illustrated using a set of small real-world datasets and more than a hundred examples, the book is oriented towards students, practitioners, and theoreticians of cluster analysis. Covering topics that are beyond the scope of most texts, the author’s explanations of data recovery methods, theory-based advice, pre- and post-processing issues and his clear, practical instructions for real-world data mining make this book ideally suited for teaching, self-study, and professional reference.

Boris Mirkin is a professor of computer science at the University of London, UK.

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