5 resultados para stream mining

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


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In ubiquitous data stream mining applications, different devices often aim to learn concepts that are similar to some extent. In these applications, such as spam filtering or news recommendation, the data stream underlying concept (e.g., interesting mail/news) is likely to change over time. Therefore, the resultant model must be continuously adapted to such changes. This paper presents a novel Collaborative Data Stream Mining (Coll-Stream) approach that explores the similarities in the knowledge available from other devices to improve local classification accuracy. Coll-Stream integrates the community knowledge using an ensemble method where the classifiers are selected and weighted based on their local accuracy for different partitions of the feature space. We evaluate Coll-Stream classification accuracy in situations with concept drift, noise, partition granularity and concept similarity in relation to the local underlying concept. The experimental results show that Coll-Stream resultant model achieves stability and accuracy in a variety of situations using both synthetic and real world datasets.

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Mobile activity recognition focuses on inferring the current activities of a mobile user by leveraging the sensory data that is available on today’s smart phones. The state of the art in mobile activity recognition uses traditional classification learning techniques. Thus, the learning process typically involves: i) collection of labelled sensory data that is transferred and collated in a centralised repository; ii) model building where the classification model is trained and tested using the collected data; iii) a model deployment stage where the learnt model is deployed on-board a mobile device for identifying activities based on new sensory data. In this paper, we demonstrate the Mobile Activity Recognition System (MARS) where for the first time the model is built and continuously updated on-board the mobile device itself using data stream mining. The advantages of the on-board approach are that it allows model personalisation and increased privacy as the data is not sent to any external site. Furthermore, when the user or its activity profile changes MARS enables promptly adaptation. MARS has been implemented on the Android platform to demonstrate that it can achieve accurate mobile activity recognition. Moreover, we can show in practise that MARS quickly adapts to user profile changes while at the same time being scalable and efficient in terms of consumption of the device resources.

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Los avances en el hardware permiten disponer de grandes volúmenes de datos, surgiendo aplicaciones que deben suministrar información en tiempo cuasi-real, la monitorización de pacientes, ej., el seguimiento sanitario de las conducciones de agua, etc. Las necesidades de estas aplicaciones hacen emerger el modelo de flujo de datos (data streaming) frente al modelo almacenar-para-despuésprocesar (store-then-process). Mientras que en el modelo store-then-process, los datos son almacenados para ser posteriormente consultados; en los sistemas de streaming, los datos son procesados a su llegada al sistema, produciendo respuestas continuas sin llegar a almacenarse. Esta nueva visión impone desafíos para el procesamiento de datos al vuelo: 1) las respuestas deben producirse de manera continua cada vez que nuevos datos llegan al sistema; 2) los datos son accedidos solo una vez y, generalmente, no son almacenados en su totalidad; y 3) el tiempo de procesamiento por dato para producir una respuesta debe ser bajo. Aunque existen dos modelos para el cómputo de respuestas continuas, el modelo evolutivo y el de ventana deslizante; éste segundo se ajusta mejor en ciertas aplicaciones al considerar únicamente los datos recibidos más recientemente, en lugar de todo el histórico de datos. En los últimos años, la minería de datos en streaming se ha centrado en el modelo evolutivo. Mientras que, en el modelo de ventana deslizante, el trabajo presentado es más reducido ya que estos algoritmos no sólo deben de ser incrementales si no que deben borrar la información que caduca por el deslizamiento de la ventana manteniendo los anteriores tres desafíos. Una de las tareas fundamentales en minería de datos es la búsqueda de agrupaciones donde, dado un conjunto de datos, el objetivo es encontrar grupos representativos, de manera que se tenga una descripción sintética del conjunto. Estas agrupaciones son fundamentales en aplicaciones como la detección de intrusos en la red o la segmentación de clientes en el marketing y la publicidad. Debido a las cantidades masivas de datos que deben procesarse en este tipo de aplicaciones (millones de eventos por segundo), las soluciones centralizadas puede ser incapaz de hacer frente a las restricciones de tiempo de procesamiento, por lo que deben recurrir a descartar datos durante los picos de carga. Para evitar esta perdida de datos, se impone el procesamiento distribuido de streams, en concreto, los algoritmos de agrupamiento deben ser adaptados para este tipo de entornos, en los que los datos están distribuidos. En streaming, la investigación no solo se centra en el diseño para tareas generales, como la agrupación, sino también en la búsqueda de nuevos enfoques que se adapten mejor a escenarios particulares. Como ejemplo, un mecanismo de agrupación ad-hoc resulta ser más adecuado para la defensa contra la denegación de servicio distribuida (Distributed Denial of Services, DDoS) que el problema tradicional de k-medias. En esta tesis se pretende contribuir en el problema agrupamiento en streaming tanto en entornos centralizados y distribuidos. Hemos diseñado un algoritmo centralizado de clustering mostrando las capacidades para descubrir agrupaciones de alta calidad en bajo tiempo frente a otras soluciones del estado del arte, en una amplia evaluación. Además, se ha trabajado sobre una estructura que reduce notablemente el espacio de memoria necesario, controlando, en todo momento, el error de los cómputos. Nuestro trabajo también proporciona dos protocolos de distribución del cómputo de agrupaciones. Se han analizado dos características fundamentales: el impacto sobre la calidad del clustering al realizar el cómputo distribuido y las condiciones necesarias para la reducción del tiempo de procesamiento frente a la solución centralizada. Finalmente, hemos desarrollado un entorno para la detección de ataques DDoS basado en agrupaciones. En este último caso, se ha caracterizado el tipo de ataques detectados y se ha desarrollado una evaluación sobre la eficiencia y eficacia de la mitigación del impacto del ataque. ABSTRACT Advances in hardware allow to collect huge volumes of data emerging applications that must provide information in near-real time, e.g., patient monitoring, health monitoring of water pipes, etc. The data streaming model emerges to comply with these applications overcoming the traditional store-then-process model. With the store-then-process model, data is stored before being consulted; while, in streaming, data are processed on the fly producing continuous responses. The challenges of streaming for processing data on the fly are the following: 1) responses must be produced continuously whenever new data arrives in the system; 2) data is accessed only once and is generally not maintained in its entirety, and 3) data processing time to produce a response should be low. Two models exist to compute continuous responses: the evolving model and the sliding window model; the latter fits best with applications must be computed over the most recently data rather than all the previous data. In recent years, research in the context of data stream mining has focused mainly on the evolving model. In the sliding window model, the work presented is smaller since these algorithms must be incremental and they must delete the information which expires when the window slides. Clustering is one of the fundamental techniques of data mining and is used to analyze data sets in order to find representative groups that provide a concise description of the data being processed. Clustering is critical in applications such as network intrusion detection or customer segmentation in marketing and advertising. Due to the huge amount of data that must be processed by such applications (up to millions of events per second), centralized solutions are usually unable to cope with timing restrictions and recur to shedding techniques where data is discarded during load peaks. To avoid discarding of data, processing of streams (such as clustering) must be distributed and adapted to environments where information is distributed. In streaming, research does not only focus on designing for general tasks, such as clustering, but also in finding new approaches that fit bests with particular scenarios. As an example, an ad-hoc grouping mechanism turns out to be more adequate than k-means for defense against Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS). This thesis contributes to the data stream mining clustering technique both for centralized and distributed environments. We present a centralized clustering algorithm showing capabilities to discover clusters of high quality in low time and we provide a comparison with existing state of the art solutions. We have worked on a data structure that significantly reduces memory requirements while controlling the error of the clusters statistics. We also provide two distributed clustering protocols. We focus on the analysis of two key features: the impact on the clustering quality when computation is distributed and the requirements for reducing the processing time compared to the centralized solution. Finally, with respect to ad-hoc grouping techniques, we have developed a DDoS detection framework based on clustering.We have characterized the attacks detected and we have evaluated the efficiency and effectiveness of mitigating the attack impact.

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Stream-mining approach is defined as a set of cutting-edge techniques designed to process streams of data in real time, in order to extract knowledge. In the particular case of classification, stream-mining has to adapt its behaviour to the volatile underlying data distributions, what has been called concept drift. Moreover, it is important to note that concept drift may lead to situations where predictive models become invalid and have therefore to be updated to represent the actual concepts that data poses. In this context, there is a specific type of concept drift, known as recurrent concept drift, where the concepts represented by data have already appeared in the past. In those cases the learning process could be saved or at least minimized by applying a previously trained model. This could be extremely useful in ubiquitous environments that are characterized by the existence of resource constrained devices. To deal with the aforementioned scenario, meta-models can be used in the process of enhancing the drift detection mechanisms used by data stream algorithms, by representing and predicting when the change will occur. There are some real-world situations where a concept reappears, as in the case of intrusion detection systems (IDS), where the same incidents or an adaptation of them usually reappear over time. In these environments the early prediction of drift by means of a better knowledge of past models can help to anticipate to the change, thus improving efficiency of the model regarding the training instances needed. By means of using meta-models as a recurrent drift detection mechanism, the ability to share concepts representations among different data mining processes is open. That kind of exchanges could improve the accuracy of the resultant local model as such model may benefit from patterns similar to the local concept that were observed in other scenarios, but not yet locally. This would also improve the efficiency of training instances used during the classification process, as long as the exchange of models would aid in the application of already trained recurrent models, that have been previously seen by any of the collaborative devices. Which it is to say that the scope of recurrence detection and representation is broaden. In fact the detection, representation and exchange of concept drift patterns would be extremely useful for the law enforcement activities fighting against cyber crime. Being the information exchange one of the main pillars of cooperation, national units would benefit from the experience and knowledge gained by third parties. Moreover, in the specific scope of critical infrastructures protection it is crucial to count with information exchange mechanisms, both from a strategical and technical scope. The exchange of concept drift detection schemes in cyber security environments would aid in the process of preventing, detecting and effectively responding to threads in cyber space. Furthermore, as a complement of meta-models, a mechanism to assess the similarity between classification models is also needed when dealing with recurrent concepts. In this context, when reusing a previously trained model a rough comparison between concepts is usually made, applying boolean logic. The introduction of fuzzy logic comparisons between models could lead to a better efficient reuse of previously seen concepts, by applying not just equal models, but also similar ones. This work faces the aforementioned open issues by means of: the MMPRec system, that integrates a meta-model mechanism and a fuzzy similarity function; a collaborative environment to share meta-models between different devices; a recurrent drift generator that allows to test the usefulness of recurrent drift systems, as it is the case of MMPRec. Moreover, this thesis presents an experimental validation of the proposed contributions using synthetic and real datasets.

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Most data stream classification techniques assume that the underlying feature space is static. However, in real-world applications the set of features and their relevance to the target concept may change over time. In addition, when the underlying concepts reappear, reusing previously learnt models can enhance the learning process in terms of accuracy and processing time at the expense of manageable memory consumption. In this paper, we propose mining recurring concepts in a dynamic feature space (MReC-DFS), a data stream classification system to address the challenges of learning recurring concepts in a dynamic feature space while simultaneously reducing the memory cost associated with storing past models. MReC-DFS is able to detect and adapt to concept changes using the performance of the learning process and contextual information. To handle recurring concepts, stored models are combined in a dynamically weighted ensemble. Incremental feature selection is performed to reduce the combined feature space. This contribution allows MReC-DFS to store only the features most relevant to the learnt concepts, which in turn increases the memory efficiency of the technique. In addition, an incremental feature selection method is proposed that dynamically determines the threshold between relevant and irrelevant features. Experimental results demonstrating the high accuracy of MReC-DFS compared with state-of-the-art techniques on a variety of real datasets are presented. The results also show the superior memory efficiency of MReC-DFS.