21 k-Means

Oracle Machine Learning for SQL supports enhanced k-Means clustering algorithm. Learn how to use the algorithm.

21.1 About k-Means

The k-Means algorithm is a distance-based clustering algorithm that partitions the data into a specified number of clusters.

Distance-based algorithms rely on a distance function to measure the similarity between cases. Cases are assigned to the nearest cluster according to the distance function used.

21.1.1 Oracle Machine Learning for SQL Enhanced k-Means

Implementation of k-Means in Oracle Machine Learning for SQL.

OML4SQL implements an enhanced version of the k-Means algorithm with the following features:

  • Distance function: The algorithm supports Euclidean and Cosine distance functions. The default is Euclidean.

  • Scalable Parallel Model build: The algorithm uses a very efficient method of initialization based on Bahmani, Bahman, et al. "Scalable k-means++." Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment 5.7 (2012): 622-633.

  • Cluster properties: For each cluster, the algorithm returns the centroid, a histogram for each attribute, and a rule describing the hyperbox that encloses the majority of the data assigned to the cluster. The centroid reports the mode for categorical attributes and the mean and variance for numerical attributes.

This approach to k-Means avoids the need for building multiple k-Means models and provides clustering results that are consistently superior to the traditional k-Means.

21.1.2 Centroid

Defines a centroid in a cluster.

The centroid represents the most typical case in a cluster. For example, in a data set of customer ages and incomes, the centroid of each cluster would be a customer of average age and average income in that cluster. The centroid is a prototype. It does not necessarily describe any given case assigned to the cluster.

The attribute values for the centroid are the mean of the numerical attributes and the mode of the categorical attributes.

21.2 k-Means Algorithm Configuration

Learn about configuring the k-Means algorithm.

The Oracle Machine Learning for SQL enhanced k-Means algorithm supports several build-time settings. All the settings have default values. There is no reason to override the defaults unless you want to influence the behavior of the algorithm in some specific way.

You can configure k-Means by specifying the following considerations:

  • Number of clusters

  • Distance Function. The default distance function is Euclidean.

See Also:

DBMS_DATA_MINING —Algorithm Settings: k-Means for a listing and explanation of the available model settings.

Note:

The term hyperparameter is also interchangeably used for model setting.

21.3 Data Preparation for k-Means

Learn about preparing data for k-Means algorithm.

Normalization is typically required by the k-Means algorithm. Automatic Data Preparation performs normalization for k-Means. If you do not use ADP, you must normalize numeric attributes before creating or applying the model.

When there are missing values in columns with simple data types (not nested), k-Means interprets them as missing at random. The algorithm replaces missing categorical values with the mode and missing numerical values with the mean.

When there are missing values in nested columns, k-Means interprets them as sparse. The algorithm replaces sparse numerical data with zeros and sparse categorical data with zero vectors.