Title
Ensemble anomaly detection from multi-resolution trajectory features
Abstract
The numerical, sequential observation of behaviors, such as trajectories, have become an important subject for data mining and knowledge discovery research. Processing the raw observation into representative features of the behaviors involves an implicit choice of time-scale and resolution, which critically affect the final output of the mining techniques. The choice is associated with the parameters of data-processing, e.g., smoothing and segmentation, which unintuitively yet strongly influence the intrinsic structure of the numerical data. Data mining techniques generally require users to provide an appropriately processed input, but selecting a resolution is an arduous task that may require an expensive, manual examination of outputs between different settings. In this paper, we propose a novel ensemble framework for aggregating outcomes in different settings of scale and resolution parameters for an anomaly detection task. Such a task is difficult for existing ensemble approaches based on weighted combination because: (a) evaluating and weighing an output requires training samples of anomalies which are generally unavailable, (b) the detectability of anomalies can depend on the resolution, i.e., the distinction from normal instances may only be apparent within a small, selective range of parameters. In the proposed framework, predictions based on different resolutions are aggregated to construct meta-feature representations of the behavior instances. The meta-features provide the discriminative information for conducting a clustering-based anomaly detection. In the proposed framework, two interrelated tasks of the behavior analysis: processing the numerical data and discovering anomalous patterns, are addressed jointly, providing an intuitive alternative for a knowledge-intensive parameter selection. We also design an efficient clustering-based anomaly detection algorithm which reduces the computational burden of mining at multiple resolutions. We conduct an empirical study of the proposed framework using real-world trajectory data. It shows that the proposed framework achieves a significant improvement over the conventional ensemble approach.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1007/s10618-013-0334-x
Data Min. Knowl. Discov.
Keywords
DocType
Volume
Behavioral data mining,Trajectory data mining,Multi-resolution features,Ensemble anomaly detection
Journal
29
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
1
1384-5810
6
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.40
67
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Shin Ando114013.89
Theerasak Thanomphongphan260.40
Yoichi Seki3338.64
Einoshin Suzuki485393.41