In an era where accumulating data is easy and storing it inexpensive, feature selection plays a central role in helping to reduce the high-dimensionality of huge amounts of otherwise meaningless data. In this paper, we propose a graph-based method for feature selection that ranks features by identifying the most important ones into arbitrary set of cues. Mapping the problem on an affinity graph - where features are the nodes - the solution is given by assessing the importance of nodes through some indicators of centrality, in particular, the Eigenvector Centrality (EC). The gist of EC is to estimate the importance of a feature as a function of the importance of its neighbors. Ranking central nodes individuates candidate features, which turn out to be effective from a classification point of view, as proved by a thoroughly experimental section. Our approach has been tested on 7 diverse datasets from recent literature (e.g., biological data, object recognition, among others), and compared against filter, embedded, and wrappers methods. The results are remarkable in terms of accuracy, stability and low execution time.
Feature Selection via Eigenvector Centrality / Roffo, Giorgio; Melzi, Simone. - (2016), pp. 1-12. (Intervento presentato al convegno New Frontiers in Mining Complex Patterns in conjunction with ECML/PKDD tenutosi a Riva del Garda).
Feature Selection via Eigenvector Centrality
Melzi Simone
2016
Abstract
In an era where accumulating data is easy and storing it inexpensive, feature selection plays a central role in helping to reduce the high-dimensionality of huge amounts of otherwise meaningless data. In this paper, we propose a graph-based method for feature selection that ranks features by identifying the most important ones into arbitrary set of cues. Mapping the problem on an affinity graph - where features are the nodes - the solution is given by assessing the importance of nodes through some indicators of centrality, in particular, the Eigenvector Centrality (EC). The gist of EC is to estimate the importance of a feature as a function of the importance of its neighbors. Ranking central nodes individuates candidate features, which turn out to be effective from a classification point of view, as proved by a thoroughly experimental section. Our approach has been tested on 7 diverse datasets from recent literature (e.g., biological data, object recognition, among others), and compared against filter, embedded, and wrappers methods. The results are remarkable in terms of accuracy, stability and low execution time.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.