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The role of human factors in stereotyping behavior and perception of digital library users: A robust clustering approach
To deliver effective personalization for digital library users, it is necessary to identify which human factors are most relevant in determining the behavior and perception of these users. This paper examines three key human factors: cognitive styles, levels of expertise and gender differences, and utilizes three individual clustering techniques: k-means, hierarchical clustering and fuzzy clustering to understand user behavior and perception. Moreover, robust clustering, capable of correcting the bias of individual clustering techniques, is used to obtain a deeper understanding. The robust clustering approach produced results that highlighted the relevance of cognitive style for user behavior, i.e., cognitive style dominates and justifies each of the robust clusters created. We also found that perception was mainly determined by the level of expertise of a user. We conclude that robust clustering is an effective technique to analyze user behavior and perception
A Short Survey on Data Clustering Algorithms
With rapidly increasing data, clustering algorithms are important tools for
data analytics in modern research. They have been successfully applied to a
wide range of domains; for instance, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and
financial analysis. Formally speaking, given a set of data instances, a
clustering algorithm is expected to divide the set of data instances into the
subsets which maximize the intra-subset similarity and inter-subset
dissimilarity, where a similarity measure is defined beforehand. In this work,
the state-of-the-arts clustering algorithms are reviewed from design concept to
methodology; Different clustering paradigms are discussed. Advanced clustering
algorithms are also discussed. After that, the existing clustering evaluation
metrics are reviewed. A summary with future insights is provided at the end
Techniques for clustering gene expression data
Many clustering techniques have been proposed for the analysis of gene expression data obtained from microarray experiments. However, choice of suitable method(s) for a given experimental dataset is not straightforward. Common approaches do not translate well and fail to take account of the data profile. This review paper surveys state of the art applications which recognises these limitations and implements procedures to overcome them. It provides a framework for the evaluation of clustering in gene expression analyses. The nature of microarray data is discussed briefly. Selected examples are presented for the clustering methods considered
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