43,940 research outputs found
Median evidential c-means algorithm and its application to community detection
Median clustering is of great value for partitioning relational data. In this
paper, a new prototype-based clustering method, called Median Evidential
C-Means (MECM), which is an extension of median c-means and median fuzzy
c-means on the theoretical framework of belief functions is proposed. The
median variant relaxes the restriction of a metric space embedding for the
objects but constrains the prototypes to be in the original data set. Due to
these properties, MECM could be applied to graph clustering problems. A
community detection scheme for social networks based on MECM is investigated
and the obtained credal partitions of graphs, which are more refined than crisp
and fuzzy ones, enable us to have a better understanding of the graph
structures. An initial prototype-selection scheme based on evidential
semi-centrality is presented to avoid local premature convergence and an
evidential modularity function is defined to choose the optimal number of
communities. Finally, experiments in synthetic and real data sets illustrate
the performance of MECM and show its difference to other methods
Evidential relational clustering using medoids
In real clustering applications, proximity data, in which only pairwise
similarities or dissimilarities are known, is more general than object data, in
which each pattern is described explicitly by a list of attributes.
Medoid-based clustering algorithms, which assume the prototypes of classes are
objects, are of great value for partitioning relational data sets. In this
paper a new prototype-based clustering method, named Evidential C-Medoids
(ECMdd), which is an extension of Fuzzy C-Medoids (FCMdd) on the theoretical
framework of belief functions is proposed. In ECMdd, medoids are utilized as
the prototypes to represent the detected classes, including specific classes
and imprecise classes. Specific classes are for the data which are distinctly
far from the prototypes of other classes, while imprecise classes accept the
objects that may be close to the prototypes of more than one class. This soft
decision mechanism could make the clustering results more cautious and reduce
the misclassification rates. Experiments in synthetic and real data sets are
used to illustrate the performance of ECMdd. The results show that ECMdd could
capture well the uncertainty in the internal data structure. Moreover, it is
more robust to the initializations compared with FCMdd.Comment: in The 18th International Conference on Information Fusion, July
2015, Washington, DC, USA , Jul 2015, Washington, United State
Autonomous clustering using rough set theory
This paper proposes a clustering technique that minimises the need for subjective
human intervention and is based on elements of rough set theory. The proposed algorithm is
unified in its approach to clustering and makes use of both local and global data properties to
obtain clustering solutions. It handles single-type and mixed attribute data sets with ease and
results from three data sets of single and mixed attribute types are used to illustrate the
technique and establish its efficiency
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