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    LEARNING FROM INCOMPLETE HIGH-DIMENSIONAL DATA

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2013
    Author
    Lou, Qiang
    Advisor
    Obradovic, Zoran
    Committee member
    Vucetic, Slobodan
    Latecki, Longin
    Davey, Adam
    Department
    Computer and Information Science
    Subject
    Computer Science
    Data Mining
    Feature Selection
    High-dimensional Data
    Incomplete Data
    Machine Learning
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/1770
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/1752
    Abstract
    Data sets with irrelevant and redundant features and large fraction of missing values are common in the real life application. Learning such data usually requires some preprocess such as selecting informative features and imputing missing values based on observed data. These processes can provide more accurate and more efficient prediction as well as better understanding of the data distribution. In my dissertation I will describe my work in both of these aspects and also my following up work on feature selection in incomplete dataset without imputing missing values. In the last part of my dissertation, I will present my current work on more challenging situation where high-dimensional data is time-involving. The first two parts of my dissertation consist of my methods that focus on handling such data in a straightforward way: imputing missing values first, and then applying traditional feature selection method to select informative features. We proposed two novel methods, one for imputing missing values and the other one for selecting informative features. We proposed a new method that imputes the missing attributes by exploiting temporal correlation of attributes, correlations among multiple attributes collected at the same time and space, and spatial correlations among attributes from multiple sources. The proposed feature selection method aims to find a minimum subset of the most informative variables for classification/regression by efficiently approximating the Markov Blanket which is a set of variables that can shield a certain variable from the target. I present, in the third part, how to perform feature selection in incomplete high-dimensional data without imputation, since imputation methods only work well when data is missing completely at random, when fraction of missing values is small, or when there is prior knowledge about the data distribution. We define the objective function of the uncertainty margin-based feature selection method to maximize each instance's uncertainty margin in its own relevant subspace. In optimization, we take into account the uncertainty of each instance due to the missing values. The experimental results on synthetic and 6 benchmark data sets with few missing values (less than 25%) provide evidence that our method can select the same accurate features as the alternative methods which apply an imputation method first. However, when there is a large fraction of missing values (more than 25%) in data, our feature selection method outperforms the alternatives, which impute missing values first. In the fourth part, I introduce my method handling more challenging situation where the high-dimensional data varies in time. Existing way to handle such data is to flatten temporal data into single static data matrix, and then applying traditional feature selection method. In order to keep the dynamics in the time series data, our method avoid flattening the data in advance. We propose a way to measure the distance between multivariate temporal data from two instances. Based on this distance, we define the new objective function based on the temporal margin of each data instance. A fixed-point gradient descent method is proposed to solve the formulated objective function to learn the optimal feature weights. The experimental results on real temporal microarray data provide evidence that the proposed method can identify more informative features than the alternatives that flatten the temporal data in advance.
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