1,332 research outputs found

    SMOTE for Learning from Imbalanced Data: Progress and Challenges, Marking the 15-year Anniversary

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    The Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) preprocessing algorithm is considered \de facto" standard in the framework of learning from imbalanced data. This is due to its simplicity in the design of the procedure, as well as its robustness when applied to di erent type of problems. Since its publication in 2002, SMOTE has proven successful in a variety of applications from several di erent domains. SMOTE has also inspired several approaches to counter the issue of class imbalance, and has also signi cantly contributed to new supervised learning paradigms, including multilabel classi cation, incremental learning, semi-supervised learning, multi-instance learning, among others. It is standard benchmark for learning from imbalanced data. It is also featured in a number of di erent software packages | from open source to commercial. In this paper, marking the fteen year anniversary of SMOTE, we re ect on the SMOTE journey, discuss the current state of a airs with SMOTE, its applications, and also identify the next set of challenges to extend SMOTE for Big Data problems.This work have been partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology under projects TIN2014-57251-P, TIN2015-68454-R and TIN2017-89517-P; the Project 887 BigDaP-TOOLS - Ayudas Fundaci on BBVA a Equipos de Investigaci on Cient ca 2016; and the National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant IIS-1447795

    Learning from Multi-Class Imbalanced Big Data with Apache Spark

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    With data becoming a new form of currency, its analysis has become a top priority in both academia and industry, furthering advancements in high-performance computing and machine learning. However, these large, real-world datasets come with additional complications such as noise and class overlap. Problems are magnified when with multi-class data is presented, especially since many of the popular algorithms were originally designed for binary data. Another challenge arises when the number of examples are not evenly distributed across all classes in a dataset. This often causes classifiers to favor the majority class over the minority classes, leading to undesirable results as learning from the rare cases may be the primary goal. Many of the classic machine learning algorithms were not designed for multi-class, imbalanced data or parallelism, and so their effectiveness has been hindered. This dissertation addresses some of these challenges with in-depth experimentation using novel implementations of machine learning algorithms using Apache Spark, a distributed computing framework based on the MapReduce model designed to handle very large datasets. Experimentation showed that many of the traditional classifier algorithms do not translate well to a distributed computing environment, indicating the need for a new generation of algorithms targeting modern high-performance computing. A collection of popular oversampling methods, originally designed for small binary class datasets, have been implemented using Apache Spark for the first time to improve parallelism and add multi-class support. An extensive study on how instance level difficulty affects the learning from large datasets was also performed
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