Data Mining: What is Data Mining?
Overview
Generally, data mining (sometimes called data or knowledge
discovery) is the process of analyzing data from different perspectives and
summarizing it into useful information - information that can be used to
increase revenue, cuts costs, or both. Data mining software is one of a number
of analytical tools for analyzing data. It allows users to analyze data from
many different dimensions or angles, categorize it, and summarize the
relationships identified. Technically, data mining is the process of finding correlations
or patterns among dozens of fields in large relational databases.
Continuous Innovation
Although data mining is a relatively new term, the
technology is not. Companies have used powerful computers to sift through
volumes of supermarket scanner data and analyze market research reports for
years. However, continuous innovations in computer processing power, disk
storage, and statistical software are dramatically increasing the accuracy of
analysis while driving down the cost.
Example
For example, one Midwest grocery chain used the data mining
capacity of Oracle software to
analyze local buying patterns. They discovered that when men bought diapers on
Thursdays and Saturdays, they also tended to buy beer. Further analysis showed
that these shoppers typically did their weekly grocery shopping on Saturdays. On
Thursdays, however, they only bought a few items. The retailer concluded that
they purchased the beer to have it available for the upcoming weekend. The
grocery chain could use this newly discovered information in various ways to
increase revenue. For example, they could move the beer display closer to the
diaper display. And, they could make sure beer and diapers were sold at full
price on Thursdays.
Data, Information, and Knowledge
Data
Data are any facts, numbers, or text that can be processed
by a computer. Today, organizations are accumulating vast and growing amounts
of data in different formats and different databases. This includes:
- operational or transactional data such as, sales, cost, inventory, payroll, and accounting
- nonoperational data, such as industry sales, forecast data, and macro economic data
- meta data - data about the data itself, such as logical database design or data dictionary definitions
Information
The patterns, associations, or relationships among all
this data can provide information. For example,
analysis of retail point of sale transaction data can yield information on
which products are selling and when.
Knowledge
Information can be converted into knowledge about
historical patterns and future trends. For example, summary information on
retail supermarket sales can be analyzed in light of promotional efforts to
provide knowledge of consumer buying behavior. Thus, a manufacturer or retailer
could determine which items are most susceptible to promotional efforts.
Data Warehouses
Dramatic advances in data capture, processing power, data
transmission, and storage capabilities are enabling organizations to integrate
their various databases into data warehouses. Data warehousing is
defined as a process of centralized data management and retrieval. Data
warehousing, like data mining, is a relatively new term although the concept
itself has been around for years. Data warehousing represents an ideal vision
of maintaining a central repository of all organizational data. Centralization
of data is needed to maximize user access and analysis. Dramatic technological
advances are making this vision a reality for many companies. And, equally
dramatic advances in data analysis software are allowing users to access this
data freely. The data analysis software is what supports data mining.
What can data mining do?
Data mining is primarily used today by companies with a
strong consumer focus - retail, financial, communication, and marketing
organizations. It enables these companies to determine relationships among
"internal" factors such as price, product positioning, or staff
skills, and "external" factors such as economic indicators,
competition, and customer demographics. And, it enables them to determine the
impact on sales, customer satisfaction, and corporate profits. Finally, it
enables them to "drill down" into summary information to view detail
transactional data.
With data mining, a retailer could use point-of-sale records
of customer purchases to send targeted promotions based on an individual's
purchase history. By mining demographic data from comment or warranty cards,
the retailer could develop products and promotions to appeal to specific
customer segments.
For example, Blockbuster Entertainment mines its video
rental history database to recommend rentals to individual customers. American
Express can suggest products to its cardholders based on analysis of their
monthly expenditures.
WalMart is pioneering massive data mining to transform its
supplier relationships. WalMart captures point-of-sale transactions from over
2,900 stores in 6 countries and continuously transmits this data to its massive
7.5 terabyte Teradata data
warehouse. WalMart allows more than 3,500 suppliers, to access data on their
products and perform data analyses. These suppliers use this data to identify
customer buying patterns at the store display level. They use this information
to manage local store inventory and identify new merchandising opportunities.
In 1995, WalMart computers processed over 1 million complex data queries.
The National Basketball Association (NBA) is exploring a
data mining application that can be used in conjunction with image recordings
of basketball games. The Advanced Scout software
analyzes the movements of players to help coaches orchestrate plays and
strategies. For example, an analysis of the play-by-play sheet of the game
played between the New York Knicks and the Cleveland Cavaliers on January 6,
1995 reveals that when Mark Price played the Guard position, John Williams
attempted four jump shots and made each one! Advanced Scout not only finds this
pattern, but explains that it is interesting because it differs considerably
from the average shooting percentage of 49.30% for the Cavaliers during that
game.
By using the NBA universal clock, a coach can automatically
bring up the video clips showing each of the jump shots attempted by Williams
with Price on the floor, without needing to comb through hours of video
footage. Those clips show a very successful pick-and-roll play in which Price
draws the Knick's defense and then finds Williams for an open jump shot.
How does data mining work?
While large-scale information technology has been evolving
separate transaction and analytical systems, data mining provides the link
between the two. Data mining software analyzes relationships and patterns in
stored transaction data based on open-ended user queries. Several types of
analytical software are available: statistical, machine learning, and neural
networks. Generally, any of four types of relationships are sought:
- Classes: Stored data is used to locate data in predetermined groups. For example, a restaurant chain could mine customer purchase data to determine when customers visit and what they typically order. This information could be used to increase traffic by having daily specials.
- Clusters: Data items are grouped according to logical relationships or consumer preferences. For example, data can be mined to identify market segments or consumer affinities.
- Associations: Data can be mined to identify associations. The beer-diaper example is an example of associative mining.
- Sequential patterns: Data is mined to anticipate behavior patterns and trends. For example, an outdoor equipment retailer could predict the likelihood of a backpack being purchased based on a consumer's purchase of sleeping bags and hiking shoes.
Data mining consists of five major elements:
- Extract, transform, and load transaction data onto the data warehouse system.
- Store and manage the data in a multidimensional database system.
- Provide data access to business analysts and information technology professionals.
- Analyze the data by application software.
- Present the data in a useful format, such as a graph or table.
Different levels of analysis are available:
- Artificial neural networks: Non-linear predictive models that learn through training and resemble biological neural networks in structure.
- Genetic algorithms: Optimization techniques that use processes such as genetic combination, mutation, and natural selection in a design based on the concepts of natural evolution.
- Decision trees: Tree-shaped structures that represent sets of decisions. These decisions generate rules for the classification of a dataset. Specific decision tree methods include Classification and Regression Trees (CART) and Chi Square Automatic Interaction Detection (CHAID) . CART and CHAID are decision tree techniques used for classification of a dataset. They provide a set of rules that you can apply to a new (unclassified) dataset to predict which records will have a given outcome. CART segments a dataset by creating 2-way splits while CHAID segments using chi square tests to create multi-way splits. CART typically requires less data preparation than CHAID.
- Nearest neighbor method: A technique that classifies each record in a dataset based on a combination of the classes of the k record(s) most similar to it in a historical dataset (where k 1). Sometimes called the k-nearest neighbor technique.
- Rule induction: The extraction of useful if-then rules from data based on statistical significance.
- Data visualization: The visual interpretation of complex relationships in multidimensional data. Graphics tools are used to illustrate data relationships.
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