Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021931008240
Title: Scoring the data using association rules
Authors: Liu, B. 
Ma, Y. 
Wong, C.K.
Yu, P.S.
Keywords: Association rules
Classifications
Data mining
Scoring
Target selection
Issue Date: 2003
Citation: Liu, B., Ma, Y., Wong, C.K., Yu, P.S. (2003). Scoring the data using association rules. Applied Intelligence 18 (2) : 119-135. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021931008240
Abstract: In many data mining applications, the objective is to select data cases of a target class. For example, in direct marketing, marketers want to select likely buyers of a particular product for promotion. In such applications, it is often too difficult to predict who will definitely be in the target class (e.g., the buyer class) because the data used for modeling is often very noisy and has a highly imbalanced class distribution. Traditionally, classification systems are used to solve this problem. Instead of classifying each data case to a definite class (e.g., buyer or non-buyer), a classification system is modified to produce a class probability estimate (or a score) for the data case to indicate the likelihood that the data case belongs to the target class (e.g., the buyer class). However, existing classification systems only aim to find a subset of the regularities or rules that exist in data. This subset of rules only gives a partial picture of the domain. In this paper, we show that the target selection problem can be mapped to association rule mining to provide a more powerful solution to the problem. Since association rule mining aims to find all rules in data, it is thus able to give a complete picture of the underlying relationships in the domain. The complete set of rules enables us to assign a more accurate class probability estimate to each data case. This paper proposes an effective and efficient technique to compute class probability estimates using association rules. Experiment results using public domain data and real-life application data show that in general the new technique performs markedly better than the state-of-the-art classification system C4.5, boosted C4.5, and the Naive Bayesian system.
Source Title: Applied Intelligence
URI: http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/39129
ISSN: 0924669X
DOI: 10.1023/A:1021931008240
Appears in Collections:Staff Publications

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