12Outlier-1
12Outlier-1
Concepts and
Techniques
(3rd ed.)
— Chapter 12 —
Gretzky, ...
Outliers are different from the noise data
Noise is random error or variance in a measured variable
Customer segmentation
Medical analysis
3
Types of Outliers (I)
Three kinds: global, contextual and collective outliers
Global outlier (or point anomaly) Global Outlier
Object is O if it significantly deviates from the rest of the data set
g
Ex. Intrusion detection in computer networks
Issue: Find an appropriate measurement of deviation
The border between normal and outlier objects is often a gray area
between normal objects and outliers. It may help hide outliers and
reduce the effectiveness of outlier detection
Understandability
Understand why these are outliers: Justification of the detection
Supervised, semi-supervised vs. unsupervised methods
Based on assumptions about normal data and outliers:
Statistical, proximity-based, and clustering-based methods
Outlier Detection I: Supervised Methods
Modeling outlier detection as a classification problem
Samples examined by domain experts used for training & testing
Methods for Learning a classifier for outlier detection effectively:
Model normal objects & report those not matching the model as
outliers, or
Model outliers and treat those not matching the model as normal
Challenges
Imbalanced classes, i.e., outliers are rare: Boost the outlier class
and make up some artificial outliers
Catch as many outliers as possible, i.e., recall is more important
than accuracy (i.e., not mislabeling normal objects as outliers) 8
Outlier Detection II: Unsupervised
Methods
Assume the normal objects are somewhat ``clustered'‘ into multiple
groups, each having some distinct features
An outlier is expected to be far away from any groups of normal objects
Weakness: Cannot detect collective outlier effectively
Normal objects may not share any strong patterns, but the collective
Problem 2: Costly since first clustering: but far less outliers than
normal objects
Newer methods: tackle outliers directly
9
Outlier Detection III: Semi-Supervised
Methods
Situation: In many applications, the number of labeled data is often
small: Labels could be on outliers only, normal objects only, or both
Semi-supervised outlier detection: Regarded as applications of semi-
supervised learning
If some labeled normal objects are available
Use the labeled examples and the proximate unlabeled objects to
train a model for normal objects
Those not fitting the model of normal objects are detected as outliers
If only some labeled outliers are available, a small number of labeled
outliers many not cover the possible outliers well
To improve the quality of outlier detection, one can get help from
models for normal objects learned from unsupervised methods
10
Outlier Detection (1): Statistical Methods
Statistical methods (also known as model-based methods) assume that the normal
data follow some statistical model (a stochastic model)
The data not following the model are outliers.
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Outlier Detection (2): Proximity-Based
Methods
An object is an outlier if the nearest neighbors of the object are far away, i.e., the
proximity of the object is significantly deviates from the proximity of most of the
other objects in the same data set
13
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
14
Statistical Approaches
Statistical approaches assume that the objects in a data set are
generated by a stochastic process (a generative model)
Idea: learn a generative model fitting the given data set, and then
identify the objects in low probability regions of the model as outliers
Methods are divided into two categories: parametric vs. non-
parametric
Parametric method
Assumes that the normal data is generated by a parametric
Non-parametric method
Not assume an a-priori statistical model and determine the model
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Parametric Methods I: The Grubb’s Test
Univariate outlier detection: The Grubb's test (maximum normed
residual test) ─ another statistical method under normal distribution
For each object x in a data set, compute its z-score: x is an outlier if
17
Parametric Methods II: Detection of
Multivariate Outliers
Multivariate data: A data set involving two or more attributes or
variables
Transform the multivariate outlier detection task into a univariate outlier
detection problem
Method 1. Compute Mahalaobis distance
Let ō be the mean vector for a multivariate data set. Mahalaobis
distance for an object o to ō is MDist(o, ō) = (o – ō )T S –1(o – ō)
where S is the covariance matrix
Use the Grubb's test on this measure to detect outliers
Method 2. Use χ2 –statistic:
where Ei is the mean of the i-dimension among all objects, and n is
the dimensionality
If χ2 –statistic is large, then object oi is an outlier
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Parametric Methods III: Using Mixture of
Parametric Distributions
Assuming data generated by a normal distribution
could be sometimes overly simplified
Example (right figure): The objects between the two
clusters cannot be captured as outliers since they
are close to the estimated mean
To overcome this problem, assume the normal data is generated by two
normal distributions. For any object o in the data set, the probability that
o is generated by the mixture of the two distributions is given by
where fθ1 and fθ2 are the probability density functions of θ1 and θ2
Then use EM algorithm to learn the parameters μ1, σ1, μ2, σ2 from data
An object o is an outlier if it does not belong to any cluster
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Non-Parametric Methods: Detection Using
Histogram
The model of normal data is learned from the
input data without any a priori structure.
Often makes fewer assumptions about the data,
and thus can be applicable in more scenarios
Outlier detection using histogram:
Figure shows the histogram of purchase amounts in transactions
A transaction in the amount of $7,500 is an outlier, since only 0.2%
transactions have an amount higher than $5,000
Problem: Hard to choose an appropriate bin size for histogram
Too small bin size → normal objects in empty/rare bins, false positive
Too big bin size → outliers in some frequent bins, false negative
Solution: Adopt kernel density estimation to estimate the probability density
distribution of the data. If the estimated density function is high, the object is
likely normal. Otherwise, it is likely an outlier.
20
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
21
Proximity-Based Approaches: Distance-Based
vs. Density-Based Outlier Detection
Intuition: Objects that are far away from the others are
outliers
Assumption of proximity-based approach: The proximity of
an outlier deviates significantly from that of most of the
others in the data set
Two types of proximity-based outlier detection methods
Distance-based outlier detection: An object o is an
outlier if its neighborhood does not have enough other
points
Density-based outlier detection: An object o is an outlier
if its density is relatively much lower than that of its
neighbors
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Distance-Based Outlier Detection
For each object o, examine the # of other objects in the r-neighborhood
of o, where r is a user-specified distance threshold
An object o is an outlier if most (taking π as a fraction threshold) of the
objects in D are far away from o, i.e., not in the r-neighborhood of o
The lower the local reachability density of o, and the higher the local
reachability density of the kNN of o, the higher LOF
This captures a local outlier whose local density is relatively low
comparing to the local densities of its kNN
26
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
27
Clustering-Based Outlier Detection (1 & 2):
Not belong to any cluster, or far from the closest one
An object is an outlier if (1) it does not belong to any cluster, (2) there is
a large distance between the object and its closest cluster , or (3) it
belongs to a small or sparse cluster
Case I: Not belong to any cluster
Identify animals not part of a flock: Using a density-
based clustering method such as DBSCAN
Case 2: Far from its closest cluster
Using k-means, partition data points of into clusters
For each object o, assign an outlier score based on
its distance from its closest center
If dist(o, c )/avg_dist(c ) is large, likely an outlier
o o
Ex. Intrusion detection: Consider the similarity between
data points and the clusters in a training data set
Use a training set to find patterns of “normal” data, e.g., frequent
itemsets in each segment, and cluster similar connections into groups
Compare new data points with the clusters mined—Outliers are
possible attacks 28
Clustering-Based Outlier Detection (3):
Detecting Outliers in Small Clusters
FindCBLOF: Detect outliers in small clusters
Find clusters, and sort them in decreasing size
To each data point, assign a cluster-based local
outlier factor (CBLOF):
If obj p belongs to a large cluster, CBLOF =
cluster_size X similarity between p and cluster
If p belongs to a small one, CBLOF = cluster size
X similarity betw. p and the closest large cluster
Ex. In the figure, o is outlier since its closest large cluster is C 1, but the
similarity between o and C1 is small. For any point in C3, its closest
large cluster is C2 but its similarity from C2 is low, plus |C3| = 3 is small
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Clustering-Based Method: Strength and
Weakness
Strength
Detect outliers without requiring any labeled data
Once the cluster are obtained, need only compare any object
A point is assigned to a cluster if the center of the cluster is
within a pre-defined distance threshold from the point
If a point cannot be assigned to any existing cluster, a new
cluster is created and the distance threshold may be learned
from the training data under certain conditions
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
31
Classification-Based Method I: One-Class
Model
Idea: Train a classification model that can
distinguish “normal” data from outliers
A brute-force approach: Consider a training set
that contains samples labeled as “normal” and
others labeled as “outlier”
But, the training set is typically heavily
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Classification-Based Method II: Semi-Supervised
Learning
Semi-supervised learning: Combining classification-
based and clustering-based methods
Method
Using a clustering-based approach, find a large
the training set, but often difficult to obtain representative and high-
quality training data
33
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
34
into
Conventional Outlier Detection
If the contexts can be clearly identified, transform it to conventional
outlier detection
1. Identify the context of the object using the contextual attributes
2. Calculate the outlier score for the object in the context using a
conventional outlier detection method
Ex. Detect outlier customers in the context of customer groups
Contextual attributes: age group, postal code
Steps: (1) locate c’s context, (2) compare c with the other customers in
the same group, and (3) use a conventional outlier detection method
If the context contains very few customers, generalize contexts
Ex. Learn a mixture model U on the contextual attributes, and
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Mining Contextual Outliers II: Modeling
Normal Behavior with Respect to Contexts
In some applications, one cannot clearly partition the data into contexts
Ex. if a customer suddenly purchased a product that is unrelated to
those she recently browsed, it is unclear how many products
browsed earlier should be considered as the context
Model the “normal” behavior with respect to contexts
Using a training data set, train a model that predicts the expected
behavior attribute values with respect to the contextual attribute
values
An object is a contextual outlier if its behavior attribute values
significantly deviate from the values predicted by the model
Using a prediction model that links the contexts and behavior, these
methods avoid the explicit identification of specific contexts
Methods: A number of classification and prediction techniques can be
used to build such models, such as regression, Markov Models, and
Finite State Automaton
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Mining Collective Outliers I: On the
Set of “Structured Objects”
Collective outlier if objects as a group deviate significantly
from the entire data
Need to examine the structure of the data set, i.e, the
relationships between multiple data objects
Each of these structures is inherent to its respective type of data
For temporal data (such as time series and sequences), we explore
the structures formed by time, which occur in segments of the time
series or subsequences
For spatial data, explore local areas
For graph and network data, we explore subgraphs
Difference from the contextual outlier detection: the structures are
often not explicitly defined, and have to be discovered as part of the
outlier detection process.
Collective outlier detection methods: two categories
Reduce the problem to conventional outlier detection
Identify structure units, treat each structure unit (e.g.,
subsequence, time series segment, local area, or subgraph) as
a data object, and extract features
Then outlier detection on the set of “structured objects”
constructed as such using the extracted features
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Mining Collective Outliers II: Direct
Modeling of the Expected Behavior of
Structure Units
Models the expected behavior of structure units directly
Ex. 1. Detect collective outliers in online social network of customers
Treat each possible subgraph of the network as a structure unit
Small subgraphs that are of very low frequency
Large subgraphs that are surprisingly frequent
Ex. 2. Detect collective outliers in temporal sequences
Learn a Markov model from the sequences
application dependent
The computational cost is often high due to the sophisticated
mining process
38
Chapter 12. Outlier Analysis
Outlier and Outlier Analysis
Outlier Detection Methods
Statistical Approaches
Proximity-Base Approaches
Clustering-Base Approaches
Classification Approaches
Mining Contextual and Collective Outliers
Outlier Detection in High Dimensional Data
Summary
39
Challenges for Outlier Detection in High-
Dimensional Data
Interpretation of outliers
Detecting outliers without saying why they are outliers is not very
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Approach I: Extending Conventional Outlier
Detection
Method 1: Detect outliers in the full space, e.g., HilOut Algorithm
Find distance-based outliers, but use the ranks of distance instead of
Consider a k-d cube: k ranges on k dimensions, with n objects
If objects are independently distributed, the expected number of
objects falling into a k-dimensional region is (1/ φ)kn = fkn,the
standard deviation is
The sparsity coefficient of cube C:
If S(C) < 0, C contains less objects than expected
The more negative, the sparser C is and the more likely the
objects in C are outliers in the subspace
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Approach III: Modeling High-Dimensional
Outliers
Develop new models for high-
dimensional outliers directly
Avoid proximity measures and adopt A set of points
form a cluster
new heuristics that do not deteriorate except c
in high-dimensional data (outlier)
Ex. Angle-based outliers: Kriegel, Schubert, and Zimek [KSZ08]
For each point o, examine the angle ∆xoy for every pair of points x, y.
Point in the center (e.g., a), the angles formed differ widely