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Slides 06FPBasic

The Apriori algorithm uses a candidate generation-and-test approach to mine frequent itemsets. It leverages the downward closure property to only generate candidate itemsets that are potentially frequent. The algorithm makes multiple passes over the transactional database, where in each pass it generates candidate itemsets of a particular length and tests their frequency by scanning the database. It terminates when no further frequent itemsets are found.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views

Slides 06FPBasic

The Apriori algorithm uses a candidate generation-and-test approach to mine frequent itemsets. It leverages the downward closure property to only generate candidate itemsets that are potentially frequent. The algorithm makes multiple passes over the transactional database, where in each pass it generates candidate itemsets of a particular length and tests their frequency by scanning the database. It terminates when no further frequent itemsets are found.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Data Mining:

Concepts and Techniques


(3rd ed.)

— Chapter 6 —

Jiawei Han, Micheline Kamber, and Jian Pei


University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign &
Simon Fraser University
©2011 Han, Kamber & Pei. All rights reserved.

1
Chapter 5: Mining Frequent Patterns, Association and
Correlations: Basic Concepts and Methods
■ Basic Concepts

■ Frequent Itemset Mining Methods

■ Which Patterns Are Interesting?—Pattern

Evaluation Methods

■ Summary

2
What Is Frequent Pattern Analysis?
■ Frequent pattern: a pattern (a set of items, subsequences, substructures,
etc.) that occurs frequently in a data set
■ First proposed by Agrawal, Imielinski, and Swami [AIS93] in the context
of frequent itemsets and association rule mining
■ Motivation: Finding inherent regularities in data
■ What products were often purchased together?— Beer and diapers?!
■ What are the subsequent purchases after buying a PC?
■ What kinds of DNA are sensitive to this new drug?
■ Can we automatically classify web documents?
■ Applications
■ Basket data analysis, cross-marketing, catalog design, sale campaign
analysis, Web log (click stream) analysis, and DNA sequence analysis.
3
Why Is Freq. Pattern Mining Important?

■ Freq. pattern: An intrinsic and important property of


datasets
■ Foundation for many essential data mining tasks
■ Association, correlation, and causality analysis

■ Sequential, structural (e.g., sub-graph) patterns

■ Pattern analysis in spatiotemporal, multimedia, time-

series, and stream data


■ Classification: discriminative, frequent pattern analysis

■ Cluster analysis: frequent pattern-based clustering

■ Data warehousing: iceberg cube and cube-gradient

■ Semantic data compression: fascicles

■ Broad applications

4
Basic Concepts: Frequent Patterns

Tid Items bought ■ itemset: A set of one or more


10 Beer, Nuts, Diaper items
20 Beer, Coffee, Diaper ■ k-itemset X = {x1, …, xk}
30 Beer, Diaper, Eggs ■ (absolute) support, or, support
40 Nuts, Eggs, Milk count of X: Frequency or
50 Nuts, Coffee, Diaper, Eggs, Milk occurrence of an itemset X
Custome Customer ■ (relative) support, s, is the
r buys fraction of transactions that
buys diaper contains X (i.e., the probability
both that a transaction contains X)
■ An itemset X is frequent if X’s
support is no less than a
Custome minsup threshold
r
buys
beer 5
Basic Concepts: Association Rules
Tid Items bought
■ Find all the rules X Y with
10 Beer, Nuts, Diaper
minimum support and confidence
20 Beer, Coffee, Diaper
30 Beer, Diaper, Eggs ■ support, s , probability that a

40 Nuts, Eggs, Milk transaction contains X ∪ Y


50 Nuts, Coffee, Diaper, Eggs, Milk
■ confidence, c, conditional
Customer Custome probability that a transaction
buys both r
buys having X also contains Y
diaper Let minsup = 50%, minconf = 50%
Freq. Pat.: Beer:3, Nuts:3, Diaper:4, Eggs:3,
{Beer, Diaper}:3
Custome
r Association rules: (many more!)
buys ■
■ Beer Diaper (60%, 100%)
beer
■ Diaper Beer (60%, 75%)
6
Closed Patterns and Max-Patterns
■ A long pattern contains a combinatorial number of sub-
patterns, e.g., {a1, …, a100} contains (1001) + (1002) + … +
(110000) = 2100 – 1 = 1.27*1030 sub-patterns!
■ Solution: Mine closed patterns and max-patterns instead
■ An itemset X is closed if X is frequent and there exists no
super-pattern Y ‫ כ‬X, with the same support as X
(proposed by Pasquier, et al. @ ICDT’99)
■ An itemset X is a max-pattern if X is frequent and there
exists no frequent super-pattern Y ‫ כ‬X (proposed by
Bayardo @ SIGMOD’98)
■ Closed pattern is a lossless compression of freq. patterns
■ Reducing the # of patterns and rules
7
Closed Patterns and Max-Patterns
■ Exercise. DB = {<a1, …, a100>, < a1, …, a50>}
■ Min_sup = 1.

■ What is the set of closed itemset?


■ <a1, …, a100>: 1
■ < a1, …, a50>: 2
■ What is the set of max-pattern?
■ <a1, …, a100>: 1
■ What is the set of all patterns?
■ !!

8
Computational Complexity of Frequent Itemset Mining

■ How many itemsets are potentially to be generated in the worst case?


■ The number of frequent itemsets to be generated is senstive to the
minsup threshold
■ When minsup is low, there exist potentially an exponential number of
frequent itemsets
■ The worst case: MN where M: # distinct items, and N: max length of
transactions
■ The worst case complexty vs. the expected probability
■ Ex. Suppose Walmart has 104 kinds of products
■ The chance to pick up one product 10 -4
■ The chance to pick up a particular set of 10 products: ~10-40
■ What is the chance this particular set of 10 products to be frequent
10 3 times in 109 transactions?

9
Chapter 5: Mining Frequent Patterns, Association and
Correlations: Basic Concepts and Methods
■ Basic Concepts

■ Frequent Itemset Mining Methods

■ Which Patterns Are Interesting?—Pattern

Evaluation Methods

■ Summary

10
Scalable Frequent Itemset Mining Methods
■ Apriori: A Candidate Generation-and-Test

Approach

■ Improving the Efficiency of Apriori

■ FPGrowth: A Frequent Pattern-Growth Approach

■ ECLAT: Frequent Pattern Mining with Vertical

Data Format

11
The Downward Closure Property and Scalable
Mining Methods
■ The downward closure property of frequent patterns
■ Any subset of a frequent itemset must be frequent

■ If {beer, diaper, nuts} is frequent, so is {beer,

diaper}
■ i.e., every transaction having {beer, diaper, nuts} also

contains {beer, diaper}


■ Scalable mining methods: Three major approaches
■ Apriori (Agrawal & Srikant@VLDB’94)

■ Freq. pattern growth (FPgrowth—Han, Pei & Yin

@SIGMOD’00)
■ Vertical data format approach (Charm—Zaki & Hsiao

@SDM’02)

12
Apriori: A Candidate Generation & Test Approach

■ Apriori pruning principle: If there is any itemset which is


infrequent, its superset should not be generated/tested!
(Agrawal & Srikant @VLDB’94, Mannila, et al. @ KDD’ 94)
■ Method:
■ Initially, scan DB once to get frequent 1-itemset
■ Generate length (k+1) candidate itemsets from length k
frequent itemsets
■ Test the candidates against DB
■ Terminate when no frequent or candidate set can be
generated

13
The Apriori Algorithm—An Example
Database Supmin = 2 Itemset sup

TDB L1
Itemset sup

C
{A} 2
{A} 2
Tid Items 1 {B} 3
10 A, C, D 1st {C} 3
{B} 3

20
30
B, C, E
A, B, C, E
scan {D}
{E}
1
3
{C}
{E}
3
3

40 B, E
C C
L 2
Itemset sup
2nd 2 Itemset

scan
{A, B} 1
Itemset sup {A, B}
2 {A, C} 2
{A, C}
{A, E}
2
1 {A, C}
{B, C} 2 {A, E}
{B, C} 2
{B, E} 3
{B, E} 3 {B, C}
{C, E} 2
{C, E} 2 {B, E}

C 3rd L {C, E}

scan
Itemset Itemset sup
3 {B, C, E} 3 {B, C, E} 2
14
The Apriori Algorithm (Pseudo-Code)
Ck: Candidate itemset of size k
Lk : frequent itemset of size k

L1 = {frequent items};
for (k = 1; Lk !=∅; k++) do begin
Ck+1 = candidates generated from Lk;
for each transaction t in database do
increment the count of all candidates in Ck+1 that
are contained in t
Lk+1 = candidates in Ck+1 with min_support
end
return ∪k Lk;
15
Implementation of Apriori

■ How to generate candidates?


■ Step 1: self-joining Lk

■ Step 2: pruning
■ Example of Candidate-generation
■ L3={abc, abd, acd, ace, bcd}
■ Self-joining: L3*L3
■ abcd from abc and abd
■ acde from acd and ace
■ Pruning:
■ acde is removed because ade is not in L3
■ C4 = {abcd}
16
How to Count Supports of Candidates?

■ Why counting supports of candidates a problem?


■ The total number of candidates can be very huge

■ One transaction may contain many candidates


■ Method:
■ Candidate itemsets are stored in a hash-tree
■ Leaf node of hash-tree contains a list of itemsets and
counts
■ Interior node contains a hash table
■ Subset function: finds all the candidates contained in
a transaction

17
Counting Supports of Candidates Using Hash Tree

Subset Transaction: 1 2 3
function
1,4,7 3,9 6, 56
2,5,
8
1+235
6
13+5 23
6 4
14 5 6
1 73 53 4 35 36
12+35 5 6 6 7
6 12 35 36
4 12 15 7 8
45 5 9 68
7 45 9
8 18
Candidate Generation: An SQL Implementation
■ SQL Implementation of candidate generation
■ Suppose the items in Lk-1 are listed in an order
■ Step 1: self-joining Lk-1
insert into C k
select p.item1, p.item2, …, p.item k-1 , q.itemk-1
from Lk-1 p, Lk-1 q
where p.item1=q.item1, …, p.item k-2 =q.itemk-2 , p.itemk-1 < q.
itemk-1
■ Step 2: pruning
forall itemsets c in Ck do
forall (k-1)-subsets s of c do
if (s is not in Lk-1 ) then delete c from Ck
■ Use object-relational extensions like UDFs, BLOBs, and Table functions for
efficient implementation [See: S. Sarawagi, S. Thomas, and R. Agrawal.
Integrating association rule mining with relational database systems:
Alternatives and implications. SIGMOD’98]

19
Scalable Frequent Itemset Mining Methods
■ Apriori: A Candidate Generation-and-Test Approach

■ Improving the Efficiency of Apriori

■ FPGrowth: A Frequent Pattern-Growth Approach

■ ECLAT: Frequent Pattern Mining with Vertical Data Format

■ Mining Close Frequent Patterns and Maxpatterns

20
Further Improvement of the Apriori Method

■ Major computational challenges


■ Multiple scans of transaction database
■ Huge number of candidates
■ Tedious workload of support counting for candidates
■ Improving Apriori: general ideas
■ Reduce passes of transaction database scans
■ Shrink number of candidates
■ Facilitate support counting of candidates

21
Partition: Scan Database Only Twice
■ Any itemset that is potentially frequent in DB must be
frequent in at least one of the partitions of DB
■ Scan 1: partition database and find local frequent

patterns
■ Scan 2: consolidate global frequent patterns

■ A. Savasere, E. Omiecinski and S. Navathe, VLDB’95

DB1 + DB2 + + DBk = DB


sup1 (i) < σDB1 sup2 (i) < σDB2 supk(i) < σDBk sup(i) < σDB
DHP: Reduce the Number of Candidates

■ A k-itemset whose corresponding hashing bucket count is below the


threshold cannot be frequent
count itemsets
■ Candidates: a, b, c, d, e {ab, ad, ae}
35
■ Hash entries 88 {bd, be, de}

■ {ab, ad, ae} . .


. .
■ {bd, be, de} . .

■ … 102 {yz, qs, wt}


■ Frequent 1-itemset: a, b, d, e Hash Table
■ ab is not a candidate 2-itemset if the sum of count of {ab, ad, ae}
is below support threshold
■ J. Park, M. Chen, and P. Yu. An effective hash-based algorithm for
mining association rules. SIGMOD’95
23
Sampling for Frequent Patterns

■ Select a sample of original database, mine frequent


patterns within sample using Apriori
■ Scan database once to verify frequent itemsets found in
sample, only borders of closure of frequent patterns are
checked
■ Example: check abcd instead of ab, ac, …, etc.
■ Scan database again to find missed frequent patterns
■ H. Toivonen. Sampling large databases for association
rules. In VLDB’96

24
DIC: Reduce Number of Scans

ABC
D ■ Once both A and D are determined
frequent, the counting of AD begins
ABC ABD ACD BCD ■ Once all length-2 subsets of BCD are
determined frequent, the counting of

AB AC B AD BD CD BCD begins

C Transactions
A B C D Aprior 1-
2-
itemsets
{} i …
itemsets
Itemset 1-
la ice 2-
itemsets
S. Brin R. Motwani, J. Ullman,
DIC items 3-
and S. Tsur. Dynamic itemset
counting and implication rules items
for market basket data.
SIGMOD’97 25
Scalable Frequent Itemset Mining Methods
■ Apriori: A Candidate Generation-and-Test Approach

■ Improving the Efficiency of Apriori

■ FPGrowth: A Frequent Pattern-Growth Approach

■ ECLAT: Frequent Pattern Mining with Vertical Data Format

■ Mining Close Frequent Patterns and Maxpatterns

26
Pattern-Growth Approach: Mining Frequent Patterns
Without Candidate Generation
■ Bottlenecks of the Apriori approach
■ Breadth-first (i.e., level-wise) search
■ Candidate generation and test
■ Often generates a huge number of candidates
■ The FPGrowth Approach (J. Han, J. Pei, and Y. Yin, SIGMOD’ 00)
■ Depth-first search
■ Avoid explicit candidate generation
■ Major philosophy: Grow long patterns from short ones using local
frequent items only
■ “abc” is a frequent pattern
■ Get all transactions having “abc”, i.e., project DB on abc: DB|abc
■ “d” is a local frequent item in DB|abc abcd is a frequent pattern
27
Construct FP-tree from a Transaction Database

TID
100
Items
{ f, bought
a, c, d, g, i,(ordered)
m, p } { f, frequent
c, a, m, p }
items
200
300 {
{ a,
b, b,
f, c,
h, f,
j, l,
o, m,
w } o } { f, b {
} f, c, a, b, m } min_support =
400 { b, c, k, s, p } { c, b, p } 3
500 {a, f, c, e, l, p, m, n} {f, c, a, m, p} {}
Header Table
1. Scan DB once, find
Item frequency f: c:1
frequent 1-itemset
head 4
(single item pattern)
f 4 c: b:1 b:1
2. Sort frequent items in c 4 3
frequency descending a 3 a: p:1
order, f-list b 3 3
m 3 m: b:1
3. Scan DB again, construct
FP-tree
p 3 2
F-list = f-c-a-b-m- p: m:1
p 2 28
Partition Patterns and Databases

■ Frequent patterns can be partitioned into


subsets according to f-list
■ F-list = f-c-a-b-m-p

■ Patterns containing p

■ Patterns having m but no p

■ …

■ Patterns having c but no a nor b, m, p

■ Pattern f

■ Completeness and non-redundency

29
Find Patterns Having P From P-conditional Database

■ Starting at the frequent item header table in the FP-tree


■ Traverse the FP-tree by following the link of each frequent item p
■ Accumulate all of transformed prefix paths of item p to form p’s
conditional pattern base

Header Table {}
Item frequency f: c:1 Conditional pa ern bases
head 4 item cond. pa ern base
f 4 c: b:1 b:1 c f:3
c 4 3 a fc:3
a 3 a: p:1 b fca:1, f:1, c:1
b 3 3
m 3 m: b:1 m fca:2, fcab:1
p 3 2 p fcam:2, cb:1
p: m:1
2 30

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