Publication
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Review

On change diagnosis in evolving data streams

View publication

Abstract

In recent years, the progress in hardware technology has made it possible for organizations to store and record large streams of transactional data. This results in databases which grow without limit at a rapid rate. This data can often show important changes in trends over time. In such cases, it is useful to understand, visualize, and diagnose the evolution of these trends. In this paper, we introduce the concept of velocity density estimation, a technique used to understand, visualize, and determine trends in the evolution of fast data streams. We show how to use velocity density estimation in order to create both temporal velocity profiles and spatial velocity profiles at periodic instants in time. These profiles are then used in order to predict three kinds of data evolution: dissolution, coagulation, and shift. Methods are proposed to visualize the changing data trends in a single online scan of the data stream and a computational requirement which is linear in the number of data points. The visualization techniques can also be used to provide online animations which show the changes in the data characteristics while they occur. In addition, batch processing techniques are proposed in order to quantify the level of change across different combinations of dimensions. This quantification is then used in order to determine dimensional combinations with significant evolution. The techniques discussed in this paper can be easily extended to spatiotemporal data, changes in data snapshots at fixed instances in time, or any other data which has a temporal component during its evolution. © 2005 IEEE.

Date

Publication

IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering

Authors

Topics

Share