Data Mining

ldats2350  2020-2021  Louvain-la-Neuve

Data Mining
Due to the COVID-19 crisis, the information below is subject to change, in particular that concerning the teaching mode (presential, distance or in a comodal or hybrid format).
5 credits
15.0 h + 15.0 h
Q2
Teacher(s)
Van Oirbeek Robin;
Language
English
Prerequisites

The prerequisite(s) for this Teaching Unit (Unité d’enseignement – UE) for the programmes/courses that offer this Teaching Unit are specified at the end of this sheet.
Main themes
- Data Mining application domains - Steps of a data mining project - Sampling and partionning of the data base and training and validation sets - Data pretreatment and validation - Premilinary variable analysis, variables reduction and transformation - Classification and modeling tools of data mining - Decision trees - Neural networks - Tools to validate and compare estimated models - Case studies
Aims

At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to :

1 In this course, we will learn data mining methodology and techniques for knowledge discovery in large databases. We will also see how data mining differs from traditional statistics and how to treat a practical problem with an appropriate data mining tool.
 
Content
Introduction to data mining
  • Data and data mining systems
  • Data mining applications
  • Data mining process and methodology
  • Data mining in customer relationship management (CRM)
  • Traditional statistics versus data mining
Data preparation for data mining
  • Data preparation stages
  • Data specification
  • Data extraction and aggregations
  • Data audit and exploration
  • Data pre-processing
Predictive modelling
  • Decision trees
  • Neural networks
  • Model validation and assessment
Descriptive modelling
  • Clustering
  • K-means
  • Kohonen Self-Organising Map
Case studies
Bibliography
1. Berry M. and G. Linoff (2000), "Matering Data Mining, The Art and Science of Customer Relationship Management", John Wiley.
2. Bishop, C.M. (1995), Neural Networks for Pattern Recognition, Oxford.
3. Breiman, L., Friedman, J.H., Olshen, R.A., and Stone, C.J. (1984), "Classification and Regression Trees", Wadsworth, Inc., Belmont, California.
4. Han J. and M. Kamber (2000), "Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques", Morgan Kaufmann,.
5. Hastie Tr., R. Tibshirani and J. Friedman (2001), "The Elements of Statistical Learning -Data Mining, Inference and Prdiction", Springer.
6. Haykin S., "Neural Networks: A comprehensive Foundation", Prentice Hall, 1999
7. Kohonen T. (1995), "Self-Organizing Maps", Springer Series in Information Sciences, Oxford University Press.
8. Piatetsky-Shapiro G. and W. J. Frawley (1991), "Knowledge Discovery in Databases", AAAI/MIT Press.
9. Piatetsky-Shapiro G., U. Fayyad, and P. Smith (1996). "From data mining to knowledge discovery: An overview", In U.M. Fayyad, et al. (eds.), Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, 1-35. AAAI/MIT Press,.
10. Pyle D. (2000), "Data Prepation for Data Mining", Morgan Kaufman.
11. Richard O. Dula, Pete E. Hart and David G. Stork (2000), "Pattern Classification", John Wiley, Second edition.
12. Van Hulle M. (2000), "Faithful Representations and Topographic Maps: From Distortion- to Information-Based Self-Organization", John Willey
Faculty or entity
LSBA


Programmes / formations proposant cette unité d'enseignement (UE)

Title of the programme
Sigle
Credits
Prerequisites
Aims
Master [120] in Data Science : Statistic

Master [120] in Linguistics

Certificat d'université : Statistique et sciences des données (15/30 crédits)

Master [120] in Actuarial Science

Advanced Master in Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences

Master [120] in Mathematical Engineering

Master [120] in Environmental Bioengineering

Master [120] in Chemistry and Bioindustries

Master [120] in Statistic: General