A Comparison between Classifiers on Credit Card Fraud Detection Problem

Author(s):  
Wenxuan Shi
Author(s):  
Shashank Singh and Meenu Garg

It is essential that Visa organizations can distinguish false Mastercard exchanges so clients are not charged for things that they didn't buy. Such issues can be handled with Data Science and its significance, alongside Machine Learning, couldn't be more important. This undertaking expects to outline the demonstrating of an informational collection utilizing AI with Credit Card Fraud Detection. The Credit Card Fraud Detection Problem incorporates demonstrating past Visa exchanges with the information of the ones that ended up being extortion. This model is then used to perceive if another exchange is fake. Our target here is to identify 100% of the fake exchanges while limiting the off base misrepresentation arrangements. Charge card Fraud Detection is an average example of arrangement. In this cycle, we have zeroed in on examining and pre- preparing informational indexes just as the sending of numerous irregularity discovery calculations, for example, Local Outlier Factor and Isolation Forest calculation on the PCA changed Credit Card Transaction


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (15) ◽  
pp. 6766
Author(s):  
Igor Mekterović ◽  
Mladen Karan ◽  
Damir Pintar ◽  
Ljiljana Brkić

Online shopping, already on a steady rise, was propelled even further with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic. Of course, credit cards are a dominant way of doing business online. The credit card fraud detection problem has become relevant more than ever as the losses due to fraud accumulate. Most research on this topic takes an isolated, focused view of the problem, typically concentrating on tuning the data mining models. We noticed a significant gap between the academic research findings and the rightfully conservative businesses, which are careful when adopting new, especially black-box, models. In this paper, we took a broader perspective and considered this problem from both the academic and the business angle: we detected challenges in the fraud detection problem such as feature engineering and unbalanced datasets and distinguished between more and less lucrative areas to invest in when upgrading fraud detection systems. Our findings are based on the real-world data of CNP (card not present) fraud transactions, which are a dominant type of fraud transactions. Data were provided by our industrial partner, an international card-processing company. We tested different data mining models and approaches to the outlined challenges and compared them to their existing production systems to trace a cost-effective fraud detection system upgrade path.


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