Publications

Discovering robust knowledge from databases that change

Abstract

Many applications of knowledge discovery and data mining such as rule discovery for semantic query optimization, database integration and decision support, require the knowledge to be consistent with the data. However, databases usually change over time and make machine-discovered knowledge inconsistent. Useful knowledge should be robust against database changes so that it is unlikely to become inconsistent after database updates. This paper defines this notion of robustness in the context of relational databases and describes how robustness of first-order Horn-clause rules can be estimated. Experimental results show that our estimation approach can accurately identify robust rules. We also present a rule antecedent pruning algorithm that improves the robustness and applicability of machine discovered rules to demonstrate the usefulness of robustness estimation.

Date
January 1, 1970
Authors
Chun-Nan Hsu, Craig A Knoblock
Journal
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
Volume
2
Pages
69-95
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers