scholarly journals Supervised sequential pattern mining of event sequences in sport to identify important patterns of play: An application to rugby union

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. e0256329
Author(s):  
Rory Bunker ◽  
Keisuke Fujii ◽  
Hiroyuki Hanada ◽  
Ichiro Takeuchi

Given a set of sequences comprised of time-ordered events, sequential pattern mining is useful to identify frequent subsequences from different sequences or within the same sequence. However, in sport, these techniques cannot determine the importance of particular patterns of play to good or bad outcomes, which is often of greater interest to coaches and performance analysts. In this study, we apply a recently proposed supervised sequential pattern mining algorithm called safe pattern pruning (SPP) to 490 labelled event sequences representing passages of play from one rugby team’s matches in the 2018 Japan Top League season. We obtain patterns that are the most discriminative between scoring and non-scoring outcomes from both the team’s and opposition teams’ perspectives using SPP, and compare these with the most frequent patterns obtained with well-known unsupervised sequential pattern mining algorithms when applied to subsets of the original dataset, split on the label. From our obtained results, line breaks, successful line-outs, regained kicks in play, repeated phase-breakdown play, and failed exit plays by the opposition team were found to be the patterns that discriminated most between the team scoring and not scoring. Opposition team line breaks, errors made by the team, opposition team line-outs, and repeated phase-breakdown play by the opposition team were found to be the patterns that discriminated most between the opposition team scoring and not scoring. It was also found that, probably because of the supervised nature and pruning/safe-screening mechanisms of SPP, compared to the patterns obtained by the unsupervised methods, those obtained by SPP were more sophisticated in terms of containing a greater variety of events, and when interpreted, the SPP-obtained patterns would also be more useful for coaches and performance analysts.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rory Bunker ◽  
Keisuke Fujii ◽  
Hiroyuki Hanada ◽  
Ichiro Takeuchi

Given a set of sequences comprised of time-ordered events, sequential pattern mining is useful to identify frequent sub-sequences from different sequences or within the same sequence. However, in sport, these techniques cannot determine the importance of particular patterns of play to good or bad outcomes, which is often of greater interest to coaches. In this study, we apply a supervised sequential pattern mining algorithm called safe pattern pruning (SPP) to 490 labelled event sequences representing passages of play from one rugby team’s matches from the 2018 Japan Top League, and then evaluate the importance of the obtained sub-sequences to points-scoring outcomes. Linebreaks, successful lineouts, regained kicks in play, repeated phase-breakdown play, and failed opposition exit plays were identified as important patterns of play for the team scoring. When sequences were labelled with points scoring outcomes for the opposition teams, opposition team linebreaks, errors made by the team, opposition team lineouts, and repeated phase-breakdown play by the opposition team were identified as important patterns of play for the opposition team scoring. By virtue of its supervised nature and pruning properties, SPP obtained a greater variety of generally more sophisticated patterns than the well-known unsupervised PrefixSpan algorithm.


Author(s):  
Tao Li ◽  
Shuaichi Zhang ◽  
Hui Chen ◽  
Yongjun Ren ◽  
Xiang Li ◽  
...  

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