Real-World Applications of Periodic Patterns

2021 ◽  
pp. 229-235
Author(s):  
R. Uday Kiran ◽  
Masashi Toyoda ◽  
Koji Zettsu
2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 18-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kung-Jiuan Yang ◽  
Tzung-Pei Hong ◽  
Yuh-Min Chen ◽  
Guo-Cheng Lan

Partial periodic patterns are commonly seen in real-world applications. The major problem of mining partial periodic patterns is the efficiency problem due to a huge set of partial periodic candidates. Although some efficient algorithms have been developed to tackle the problem, the performance of the algorithms significantly drops when the mining parameters are set low. In the past, the authors have adopted the projection-based approach to discover the partial periodic patterns from single-event time series. In this paper, the authors extend it to mine partial periodic patterns from a sequence of event sets which multiple events concurrently occur at the same time stamp. Besides, an efficient pruning and filtering strategy is also proposed to speed up the mining process. Finally, the experimental results on a synthetic dataset and real oil price dataset show the good performance of the proposed approach.


Author(s):  
Kung-Jiuan Yang ◽  
Tzung-Pei Hong ◽  
Guo-Cheng Lan ◽  
Yuh-Min Chen

Partial periodic patterns are commonly seen in real-life applications and provide useful prediction with uncertainty. Most previous approaches have set a single minimum support threshold for all events to assume they have similar frequencies which is not practical for real-world applications. Instead of setting a single minimum support threshold for all events, Chen et al. proposed an FP-tree-like algorithm to allow multiple minimum supports for reflecting the natures of the events. However, such a tree-based algorithm encountered an efficiency problem while period length is long or event sequential orders in period segments are varied. Under the circumstance, many tree branches are created and much execution time is spent to find partial periodic patterns. In this paper, we thus propose a projection-based algorithm which examines only prefix subsequences and projects only corresponding postfix subsequences with multiple minimum supports to quickly find the partial periodic patterns in a recursive process. Experiments on both synthetic and real-life datasets show that the proposed algorithm is more efficient than the previous one.


Crystals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 256
Author(s):  
Christian Rodenbücher ◽  
Kristof Szot

Transition metal oxides with ABO3 or BO2 structures have become one of the major research fields in solid state science, as they exhibit an impressive variety of unusual and exotic phenomena with potential for their exploitation in real-world applications [...]


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 110
Author(s):  
Wei Ding ◽  
Sansit Patnaik ◽  
Sai Sidhardh ◽  
Fabio Semperlotti

Distributed-order fractional calculus (DOFC) is a rapidly emerging branch of the broader area of fractional calculus that has important and far-reaching applications for the modeling of complex systems. DOFC generalizes the intrinsic multiscale nature of constant and variable-order fractional operators opening significant opportunities to model systems whose behavior stems from the complex interplay and superposition of nonlocal and memory effects occurring over a multitude of scales. In recent years, a significant amount of studies focusing on mathematical aspects and real-world applications of DOFC have been produced. However, a systematic review of the available literature and of the state-of-the-art of DOFC as it pertains, specifically, to real-world applications is still lacking. This review article is intended to provide the reader a road map to understand the early development of DOFC and the progressive evolution and application to the modeling of complex real-world problems. The review starts by offering a brief introduction to the mathematics of DOFC, including analytical and numerical methods, and it continues providing an extensive overview of the applications of DOFC to fields like viscoelasticity, transport processes, and control theory that have seen most of the research activity to date.


Author(s):  
Maximo A. Roa ◽  
Mehmet R. Dogar ◽  
Jordi Pages ◽  
Carlos Vivas ◽  
Antonio Morales ◽  
...  

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