identifying patterns in spatial data xun zhou university of iowa september 5, 2014
TRANSCRIPT
IDENTIFYING PATTERNS INSPATIAL DATAXun ZhouUniversity of Iowa
September 5, 2014
OUTLINE• Introduction
• Spatial Data and Models
• Statistical models
• Spatial Pattern Families
• Computational Challenges
WHAT IS SPATIAL DATA MINING (SDM)• Identifying interesting, non-trivia, and useful patterns from
large spatial datasets
• “Spatial” is general – includes spatio-temporal
• Examples of spatial/spatio-temporal datasets:• GPS traces• Facebook / Twitter check-ins• Climate observations (e.g., rainfall, temperature, etc).• Remotely sensed images (e.g., NASA products)• Crime reports• Disease maps and records• Traffic statistics and road networks• Sales/market price data, supply maps
WHY IS SDM IMPORTANT• Location/time information brings rich context• Support decision making• Understanding natural phenomenon• Improve the quality of knowledge
• London Cholera 1854 – John Snow
• Modern examples• Predict land cover type with limited samples• Which animals often live in the same area?• Detect outbreaks of diseases/crimes• Find anomalous climate events
Picture Courtesy: Prof. Shashi Shekhar @ UMN
WHAT IS “SPECIAL” ABOUT “SPATIAL”Traditional Data Mining Spatial Data Mining
Data Types Age, salary, text… (in addition) Location, shape, time …
Relationships Arithmetic, Ordering, Subset…
Topological, directional, metric…
Statistical models
Data follows i.i.d. Data is auto-correlated & heterogeneous
Output pattern Diaper + beer = frequent set
Diaper + beer only frequent in blue-collar neighborhoods
Computation … …
Picture Source: [1]
SPATIAL DATA MINING COMPONENTS• Input Data
• Statistical Foundations
• Output patterns
• Computational Process
OUTLINE• Introduction
• Spatial Data and Models
• Statistical models
• Spatial Pattern Families
• Computational Challenges
SPATIAL DATA TYPES• Two data representation models
Vector Data (Object Model)
Raster Data (Field Model)
Data representation Geometric objects Continuous field with attribute functions
Examples Disease reports (point)GPS traces (lines/curves)Counties, states (polygons)
Satellite imagesTemperature map of the U.S.Vegetation cover in Africa
Picture source: [2]
SPATIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND OPERATIONS• Between spatial objects:• Set-oriented: Union, Intersection, Membership…• Topological: Meet, within, overlap, connected…• Directional: North, East, left, above, below…• Metric: Distance, area, perimeter
• Spatial field operations• Local, Focal, Zonal, Global
Individual location(elevation > 1000 ft.)
A small neighborhood(slope, gradient)
Part of a region(Mountain peak)
Among all the locations(The Everest)
OUTLINE• Introduction
• Spatial Data and Models
• Statistical models
• Spatial Pattern Families
• Computational Challenges
TWO KEY FEATURES• Spatial Autocorrelation• The first law of geography[*]: “Everything is related to everything, but
near things are more relevant than distant things”.• Spatial features are usually auto-correlated or clustered rather than
randomly distributed
• Spatial heterogeneity• Spatial patterns are not uniform globally – they vary from place to
place.
[*] Tobler W., (1970) "A computer movie simulating urban growth in the Detroit region". Economic Geography, 46(2): 234-240.
STATISTICAL FOUNDATIONS• Spatial statistics – a brunch of statistics
Models[4] Geostatistical Lattice(Areal) Point Process
Scenarios Continuous space Disjoint and complete partitions of the space (e.g., grids, areas)
Distribution of points
Examples Temperature in US Population of counties Locations of birds
Major techniques
Kriging (spatial interpolation)
Spatial Autoregressive Regression (SAR)Markov Random Field (MRF)
Ripley’s K-functionCross k-functionComplete Spatial Randomness (CSR)
* These are statistical models (like normal distribution) and may not lineup with data representation models.
SPATIAL NEIGHBORHOOD• A collection of nearby location/spatial object • Adjacent/connected objects/locations• Within a certain distance
• The W-matrix:
r
[0 11 01 00 1
1 00 10 11 0
]𝐴 𝐵 𝐶𝐷
𝐴𝐵𝐶𝐷
[ 0 0.50.5 00.5 00 0.5
0.5 00 0.50 0.50.5 0
]𝐴 𝐵 𝐶𝐷
𝐴𝐵𝐶𝐷
A B
C D
OUTLINE• Introduction
• Spatial Data and Models
• Statistical models
• Spatial Pattern Families
• Computational Challenges
SPATIAL PATTERN FAMILIES• A comparison with traditional DM tasks
Traditional Data Mining Pattern Families
Spatial Data Mining Pattern Families
Prediction/Classification Spatial Prediction/Geographic Classification
Clustering Spatial Clustering/Hotspot detection
Anomaly Detection Spatial Anomaly/Outlier Detection
Association Rule Mining Spatial Co-location Patterns
SPATIAL PREDICTION• Traditional classifiers based on i.i.d. and global model• Linear regression, Decision Tree, SVM, CART, etc.• Spatial auto-correlation and variation are not modeled
• Predicting land cover types, location-based recommendation
• Regression
• Spatial Decision Tree[5]
• Information gain function: add spatial autocorrelation measure• Decision rules:
Linear regression
SAR GWR
()
Traditional Spatial
f(x) > 1? Left : Right
Flip if neighbors classified differentlyIllustration of focal-test-based spatial decision tree[5]
C4.5 results on land cover data [5]
SPATIAL OUTLIER DETECTION• Traditional Anomaly Detection• Data is anomalous w.r.t. global data distribution
• Spatial outlier[6]
• Data is anomalous w.r.t. its neighbors (discontinuity)• Finding Suspicious buildings, broken sensors, or other points of interest…• Methods: • Variogram clouds• Moran scatterplot• Spatial Statistic (S)
1 1
1 5
1 2
1 21 1
2 2
1 2
2 2
4
44
4
4 4 4 4
5 5 5 5
4 5
5 5
5
55
5
1-D spatial data and distribution [1]
SPATIAL ASSOCIATION• Spatial Co-location pattern[7]
• Given a number of spatial object types and instances• Find sets of types that are frequently located in proximity• Example: {Fox, Rabbits}, {Nile Crocodiles, Egyptian Plover}
Frequent item set
Co-location Comment
Transactions Neighbor set Space is continuous, no transactions
Support, Confidence
Participation index
PI = min(AB/A, AB/B)
{‘+’, ‘x’}, {‘o’, ‘*’}
Pictures source: [1]
SPATIAL CLUSTERING• Grouping spatial objects into clusters such that• Intra-cluster similarity is maximized• Inter-cluster similarity is minimized
• Detecting communities, crowds, building blocks, etc.
• Is there a clustering tendency of data in space (point data)?
Complete Spatial Randomness(CSR) Clustered Di-clustered
1. Hierarchical2. Partitioning: k-means3. Density-based: DBSCAN
Picture Courtesy: Prof. Shashi Shekhar @ UMN
SPATIAL HOTSPOT DETECTION• Special case of clustering• Identify regions with high density - not a complete partitioning of data• Ignore noise or sparse clusters• Crime/disease outbreaks, traffic jam, water pollution…• Statistical significance – avoid random clusters
• Density-based approaches: DBSCAN[8]
• Statistical tests – spatial scan statistics[9] (public health)
Spatial Scan Statistics
Spatial Scan StatisticsDBSCAN DBSCAN
NEW DIMENSIONS OF SPATIAL PATTERNS• Patterns on Spatial Networks• Hotspots (Dangerous routes with high risk of accidents)[10]
• Clusters (Crimes along the streets, bus/bike route planning)• Predictions
• Irregular/complex-shaped Spatial Patterns• Complex-shaped clusters (terrain constraints)• Irregular Hotspots (gerrymander …)
Results on pedestrian fatality data from Orlando, FL.[10]
ADDING TIME• Input data• Spatial data Spatio-temporal data• Time series • Vector: point sequences, polygon series…• Raster: image sequences, spatial time series (a time series at each grid)
• Relationship: before, after, during, simultaneous, …
• Statistical Foundations• Markov Chain, Hidden Markov Model…• Spatiotemporal Statistics
ADDING TIME - PATTERNSSpatial Data Mining Pattern Families
Spatiotemporal Patterns
Spatial Prediction/Geographic Classification
ST prediction (trajectory prediction, climate projection, market prediction…)
Spatial Anomaly/Outlier Detection ST Anomaly (abnormal climate events, traffic sensors…)
Spatial Co-location Patterns Co-occurrence[11], Cascading pattern[12]
(Crime associations, potential social connections)
Spatial Clustering/Hotspot detection Space-time clusters[13] (disease monitoring)Moving clusters (flocks, fleet, etc)Emerging Hotspot (New market…)Spreading hotspot (Strikes, Arabic Spring…)
ADDING TIME – NEW PATTERNS• New Dimensions of Temporal Information• Change• Repeating/periodicity
Temporal dimensions Spatiotemporal Patterns
Change Change Footprint Pattern Discovery[2]
- Where and When changes occur- Climate change, Business grow, urban sprawl,
etcChange Prediction- Where and When will change occur
Repeating/periodic Finding periodic travel patterns, schedules, habitsAn annual increase of 11.5%, 2001-2012
2001 2006 2012
Vegetation increase in Saudi Arabia due to irrigation [14]
CHANGE FOOTPRINT PATTERNS
Time
Time
Time
Time
Local
Focal
Zonal
Static
Between snapshots
Point in time series
Interval in time series
OUTLINE• Introduction
• Spatial Data and Models
• Statistical models
• Spatial Pattern Families
• Computational Challenges
COMPUTATIONAL CHALLENGES• Neighborhood graph generation
• Parameter Estimation
• Better Interpretability• Complex-shapes of pattern• Filter-n-refine approach
• Pattern Completeness • High combinatorics of patterns • Enumeration and pruning strategies
• Interest measure property• DP or Greedy may not be used
• HPC with Spatial Data Mining• Parallel/Cloud Computing• GIS on Hadoop (ESRI)
Conceptual Modeling
Algorithm Design
Interest measure
Computational Scalability
Patt
ern
In
terp
reta
bili
ty
balance
SUMMARY• What is SDM and why it’s important
• What’s special about spatial
• Pattern families, potential directions and applications
• Computational Challenges
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT• This presentation is prepared based on materials from Prof. Shashi
Shekhar and the Spatial Database and Spatial Data Mining Group at the University of Minnesota (http://www.spatial.cs.umn.edu/).
REFERENCES AND READINGS[1]. Shekhar, Shashi, et al. "Identifying patterns in spatial information: A survey of methods." Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery 1.3 (2011): 193-214. [2]. Xun Zhou, Shashi Shekhar, and Reem Y. Ali. "Spatiotemporal change footprint pattern discovery: an inter‐disciplinary survey." Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery 4.1 (2014): 1-23.[3]. Shashi Shekhar and Sanjay Chawla. Spatial Database: A Tour. Prentice Hall 2003.[4]. Banerjee, Sudipto, Alan E. Gelfand, and Bradley P. Carlin. Hierarchical modeling and analysis for spatial data. CRC Press, 2004.[5]. Jiang, Z., Shekhar, S., Zhou, X., Knight, J., & Corcoran, J. (2013, December). Focal-test-based spatial decision tree learning: A summary of results. In Data Mining (ICDM), 2013 IEEE 13th International Conference on (pp. 320-329). IEEE.[6]. Shekhar, Shashi, Chang-Tien Lu, and Pusheng Zhang. "A unified approach to detecting spatial outliers." GeoInformatica 7, no. 2 (2003): 139-166.[7]. Y Huang, S Shekhar, H Xiong, Discovering colocation patterns from spatial data sets: a general approach. Knowledge and Data Engineering, IEEE Transactions on 16 (12), 1472-1485[8]. Ester, Martin; Kriegel, Hans-Peter; Sander, Jörg; Xu, Xiaowei (1996). "A density-based algorithm for discovering clusters in large spatial databases with noise". In Simoudis, Evangelos; Han, Jiawei; Fayyad, Usama M. Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-96)[9]. Kulldorff, Martin. "A spatial scan statistic." Communications in Statistics-Theory and methods 26.6 (1997): 1481-1496.[10]. Dev Oliver, Shashi Shekhar, Xun Zhou, Emre Eftelioglu, Michael Evans, Qiaodi Zhuang, James Kang, Renee Laubscher and Christopher Farah. Significant Route Discovery: A Summary of Results. In GIScience 2014 (to appear).[11]. Celik, Mete, et al. "Mixed-drove spatiotemporal co-occurrence pattern mining." Knowledge and Data Engineering, IEEE Transactions on 20.10 (2008): 1322-1335.[12]. Mohan, Pradeep, Shashi Shekhar, James A. Shine, and James P. Rogers. "Cascading spatio-temporal pattern discovery." Knowledge and Data Engineering, IEEE Transactions on 24, no. 11 (2012): 1977-1992.[13]. Daniel B. Neill, Andrew W. Moore, Maheshkumar Sabhnani, and Kenny Daniel. Detection of emerging space-time clusters. Proceedings of the 11th ACM SIGKDD Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, 218-227, 2005[14]. Xun Zhou, Shashi Shekhar, Dev Oliver. "Discovering Persistent Change Windows in Spatiotemporal Datasets: A Summary of Results". In 2nd ACM SIGSPATIAL International Workshop on Analytics for Big Geospatial Data (BigSpatial-2013), Nov 5, 2013, Orlando, Florida, USA.