Elementary Cluster Analysis: Four Basic Methods That (Usually) Work

The availability of packaged clustering programs means that anyone with data can easily do cluster analysis on...
BD$293.26 BMD
BD$293.26 BMD
SKU: 9788770224253
Product Type: Books
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Author: James C. Bezdek
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Subtotal: BD$293.26
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Elementary Cluster Analysis: Four Basic Methods That (Usually) Work by Bezdek, James C.

Elementary Cluster Analysis: Four Basic Methods That (Usually) Work

BD$293.26

Elementary Cluster Analysis: Four Basic Methods That (Usually) Work

BD$293.26
Author: James C. Bezdek
Format: Hardcover
Language: English

The availability of packaged clustering programs means that anyone with data can easily do cluster analysis on it. But many users of this technology don't fully appreciate its many hidden dangers. In today's world of "grab and go algorithms," part of my motivation for writing this book is to provide users with a set of cautionary tales about cluster analysis, for it is very much an art as well as a science, and it is easy to stumble if you don't understand its pitfalls. Indeed, it is easy to trip over them even if you do! The parenthetical word usually in the title is very important, because all clustering algorithms can and do fail from time to time.

Modern cluster analysis has become so technically intricate that it is often hard for the beginner or the non-specialist to appreciate and understand its many hidden dangers. Here's how Yogi Berra put it, and he was right:

In theory there's no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is Yogi Berra

This book is a step backwards, to four classical methods for clustering in small, static data sets that have all withstood the tests of time. The youngest of the four methods is now almost 50 years old:

  • Gaussian Mixture Decomposition (GMD, 1898)
  • SAHN Clustering (principally single linkage (SL, 1909))
  • Hard c-means (HCM, 1956, also widely known as (aka) "k-means")
  • Fuzzy c-means (FCM, 1973, reduces to HCM in a certain limit)

The dates are the first known writing (to me, anyway) about these four models. I am (with apologies to Marvel Comics) very comfortable in calling HCM, FCM, GMD and SL the Fantastic Four.

Cluster analysis is a vast topic. The overall picture in clustering is quite overwhelming, so any attempt to swim at the deep end of the pool in even a very specialized subfield requires a lot of training. But we all start out at the shallow end (or at least that's where we should start!), and this book is aimed squarely at teaching toddlers not to be afraid of the water. There is no section of this book that, if explored in real depth, cannot be expanded into its own volume. So, if your needs are for an in-depth treatment of all the latest developments in any topic in this volume, the best I can do - what I will try to do anyway - is lead you to the pool, and show you where to jump in.



Author: James C. Bezdek
Publisher: River Publishers
Published: 03/31/2022
Pages: 516
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.78lbs
Size: 10.00h x 8.00w x 1.13d
ISBN: 9788770224253

About the Author
Bezdek, James C.: - James C. Bezdek, PhD is a visiting senior fellow at University of Melbourne, Australia. He received his BS in Civil Engineering from the University of Nevada (Reno) in 1969; and his PhD in Applied Mathematics from Cornell University in 1973. He is past president of NAFIPS (North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society), IFSA (International Fuzzy Systems Association) and the IEEE CIS (Computational Intelligence Society when it was the Neural Networks Council); founding editor of the International Journal Approximate Reasoning and the IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems; Life fellow of the IEEE and IFSA; recipient of the IEEE 3rd Millennium, IEEE CIS Fuzzy Systems Pioneer, and IEEE technical field award Rosenblatt medals; and the IPMU Kempe de Feret award.

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