6 research outputs found

    Discovery of the D-basis in binary tables based on hypergraph dualization

    Get PDF
    Discovery of (strong) association rules, or implications, is an important task in data management, and it nds application in arti cial intelligence, data mining and the semantic web. We introduce a novel approach for the discovery of a speci c set of implications, called the D-basis, that provides a representation for a reduced binary table, based on the structure of its Galois lattice. At the core of the method are the D-relation de ned in the lattice theory framework, and the hypergraph dualization algorithm that allows us to e ectively produce the set of transversals for a given Sperner hypergraph. The latter algorithm, rst developed by specialists from Rutgers Center for Operations Research, has already found numerous applications in solving optimization problems in data base theory, arti cial intelligence and game theory. One application of the method is for analysis of gene expression data related to a particular phenotypic variable, and some initial testing is done for the data provided by the University of Hawaii Cancer Cente

    International Workshop "What can FCA do for Artificial Intelligence?" (FCA4AI at IJCAI 2013, Beijing, China, August 4 2013)

    Get PDF
    International audienceThis second edition of the FCA4AI workshop (the first edition was associated to the ECAI 2012 Conference, see http://www.fca4ai.hse.ru/), shows again that there are many AI researchers interested in FCA. Formal Concept Analysis (FCA) is a mathematically well-founded theory aimed at data analysis and classification. FCA allows one to build a concept lattice and a system of dependencies (implications) which can be used for many AI needs, e.g. knowledge processing involving learning, knowledge discovery, knowledge representation and reasoning, ontology engineering, as well as information retrieval and text processing. Thus, there exist many natural links between FCA and AI. Accordingly, the focus in this workshop was on how can FCA support AI activities (knowledge processing) and how can FCA be extended in order to help AI researchers to solve new and complex problems in their domains

    Learning Terminological Knowledge with High Confidence from Erroneous Data

    Get PDF
    Description logics knowledge bases are a popular approach to represent terminological and assertional knowledge suitable for computers to work with. Despite that, the practicality of description logics is impaired by the difficulties one has to overcome to construct such knowledge bases. Previous work has addressed this issue by providing methods to learn valid terminological knowledge from data, making use of ideas from formal concept analysis. A basic assumption here is that the data is free of errors, an assumption that can in general not be made for practical applications. This thesis presents extensions of these results that allow to handle errors in the data. For this, knowledge that is "almost valid" in the data is retrieved, where the notion of "almost valid" is formalized using the notion of confidence from data mining. This thesis presents two algorithms which achieve this retrieval. The first algorithm just extracts all almost valid knowledge from the data, while the second algorithm utilizes expert interaction to distinguish errors from rare but valid counterexamples

    Eighth International Workshop "What can FCA do for Artificial Intelligence?" (FCA4AI at ECAI 2020)

    Get PDF
    International audienceProceedings of the 8th International Workshop "What can FCA do for Artificial Intelligence?" (FCA4AI 2020)co-located with 24th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI 2020), Santiago de Compostela, Spain, August 29, 202
    corecore