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On the Complexity of Mining Itemsets from the Crowd Using Taxonomies

Journal article published in 2013 by Antoine Amarilli ORCID, Yael Amsterdamer, Tova Milo
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Question mark in circle
Preprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Postprint: policy unknown
Question mark in circle
Published version: policy unknown

Abstract

We study the problem of frequent itemset mining in domains where data is not recorded in a conventional database but only exists in human knowledge. We provide examples of such scenarios, and present a crowdsourcing model for them. The model uses the crowd as an oracle to find out whether an itemset is frequent or not, and relies on a known taxonomy of the item domain to guide the search for frequent itemsets. In the spirit of data mining with oracles, we analyze the com- plexity of this problem in terms of (i) crowd complexity, that measures the number of crowd questions required to iden- tify the frequent itemsets; and (ii) computational complexity, that measures the computational effort required to choose the questions. We provide lower and upper complexity bounds in terms of the size and structure of the input taxonomy, as well as the size of a concise description of the output item- sets. We also provide constructive algorithms that achieve the upper bounds, and consider more efficient variants for practical situations.