An experimental evaluation of similarity measures for uncertain time series

Author(s):  
Mahsa Orang ◽  
Nematollaah Shiri
2019 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 506-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
Izaskun Oregi ◽  
Aritz Pérez ◽  
Javier Del Ser ◽  
Jose A. Lozano

Author(s):  
Yuu Yamada ◽  
Einoshin Suzuki ◽  
Hideto Yokoi ◽  
Katsuhiko Takabayashi

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (13) ◽  
pp. 1400-1414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miriam Rodrigues da Silva ◽  
Osmar Abílio de Carvalho ◽  
Renato Fontes Guimarães ◽  
Roberto Arnaldo Trancoso Gomes ◽  
Cristiano Rosa Silva

Author(s):  
Wynne Hsu ◽  
Mong Li Lee ◽  
Junmei Wang

In this chapter, we will first give the background and review existing works in time series mining. The background material will include commonly used similarity measures and techniques for dimension reduction and data discretization. Then we will examine techniques to discover periodic and sequential patterns. This will lay the groundwork for the subsequent three chapters on mining dense periodic patterns, incremental sequence mining, and mining progressive patterns.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (01) ◽  
pp. 241-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alper Ozcan ◽  
Sule Gunduz Oguducu

Link prediction is considered as one of the key tasks in various data mining applications for recommendation systems, bioinformatics, security and worldwide web. The majority of previous works in link prediction mainly focus on the homogeneous networks which only consider one type of node and link. However, real-world networks have heterogeneous interactions and complicated dynamic structure, which make link prediction a more challenging task. In this paper, we have studied the problem of link prediction in the dynamic, undirected, weighted/unweighted, heterogeneous social networks which are composed of multiple types of nodes and links that change over time. We propose a novel method, called Multivariate Time Series Link Prediction for evolving heterogeneous networks that incorporate (1) temporal evolution of the network; (2) correlations between link evolution and multi-typed relationships; (3) local and global similarity measures; and (4) node connectivity information. Our proposed method and the previously proposed time series methods are evaluated experimentally on a real-world bibliographic network (DBLP) and a social bookmarking network (Delicious). Experimental results show that the proposed method outperforms the previous methods in terms of AUC measures in different test cases.


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