Clustering Aggregation
See: Aggregation Task, Clustering Task.
References
2011
- (Sammut & Webb, 2011) ⇒ Claude Sammut (editor), and Geoffrey I. Webb (editor). (2011). “Clustering Aggregation.” In: (Sammut & Webb, 2011) p.180
2007
- (Gionis et al., 2007) ⇒ Aristides Gionis, Heikki Mannila, and Panayiotis Tsaparas. (2007). “Clustering Aggregation." ACM Transactions on Knowledge Discovery from Data (TKDD), 1(1).
- ABSTRACT: We consider the following problem: given a set of clusterings, find a single clustering that agrees as much as possible with the input clusterings. This problem, clustering aggregation, appears naturally in various contexts. For example, clustering categorical data is an instance of the clustering aggregation problem; each categorical attribute can be viewed as a clustering of the input rows where rows are grouped together if they take the same value on that attribute. Clustering aggregation can also be used as a metaclustering method to improve the robustness of clustering by combining the output of multiple algorithms. Furthermore, the problem formulation does not require a priori information about the number of clusters; it is naturally determined by the optimization function.
In this article, we give a formal statement of the clustering aggregation problem, and we propose a number of algorithms. Our algorithms make use of the connection between clustering aggregation and the problem of correlation clustering. Although the problems we consider are NP-hard, for several of our methods, we provide theoretical guarantees on the quality of the solutions. Our work provides the best deterministic approximation algorithm for the variation of the correlation clustering problem we consider. We also show how sampling can be used to scale the algorithms for large datasets. We give an extensive empirical evaluation demonstrating the usefulness of the problem and of the solutions.
- ABSTRACT: We consider the following problem: given a set of clusterings, find a single clustering that agrees as much as possible with the input clusterings. This problem, clustering aggregation, appears naturally in various contexts. For example, clustering categorical data is an instance of the clustering aggregation problem; each categorical attribute can be viewed as a clustering of the input rows where rows are grouped together if they take the same value on that attribute. Clustering aggregation can also be used as a metaclustering method to improve the robustness of clustering by combining the output of multiple algorithms. Furthermore, the problem formulation does not require a priori information about the number of clusters; it is naturally determined by the optimization function.