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  2. Examples of data mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Examples_of_data_mining

    Metabolomics is a very data heavy subject, and often involves sifting through massive amounts of irrelevant data before finding any conclusions. Data mining has allowed this relatively new field of medical research to grow considerably within the last decade, and will likely be the method of which new research is found within the subject. [28]

  3. Relational data mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_data_mining

    Relational data mining is the data mining technique for relational databases. [1] Unlike traditional data mining algorithms, which look for patterns in a single table (propositional patterns), relational data mining algorithms look for patterns among multiple tables (relational patterns). For most types of propositional patterns, there are ...

  4. Data mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_mining

    The difference between data analysis and data mining is that data analysis is used to test models and hypotheses on the dataset, e.g., analyzing the effectiveness of a marketing campaign, regardless of the amount of data. In contrast, data mining uses machine learning and statistical models to uncover clandestine or hidden patterns in a large ...

  5. Link analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link_analysis

    Knowledge discovery is an iterative and interactive process used to identify, analyze and visualize patterns in data. [1] Network analysis, link analysis and social network analysis are all methods of knowledge discovery, each a corresponding subset of the prior method.

  6. Affinity analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affinity_analysis

    This data mining method has been explored in different fields including disease diagnosis, market basket analysis, retail industry, higher education, and financial analysis. In retail, affinity analysis is used to perform market basket analysis, in which retailers seek to understand the purchase behavior of customers.

  7. Data wrangling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_wrangling

    Data wrangling can benefit data mining by removing data that does not benefit the overall set, or is not formatted properly, which will yield better results for the overall data mining process. An example of data mining that is closely related to data wrangling is ignoring data from a set that is not connected to the goal: say there is a data ...

  8. Frequent pattern discovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequent_pattern_discovery

    Frequent pattern discovery (or FP discovery, FP mining, or Frequent itemset mining) is part of knowledge discovery in databases, Massive Online Analysis, and data mining; it describes the task of finding the most frequent and relevant patterns in large datasets. [1] [2] The concept was first introduced for mining transaction databases. [3]

  9. Oracle Data Mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_Data_Mining

    Oracle Data Mining (ODM) is an option of Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. It contains several data mining and data analysis algorithms for classification, prediction, regression, associations, feature selection, anomaly detection, feature extraction, and specialized analytics.