Uncharted Forest a Technique for Exploratory Data Analysis

11 Feb 2018  ·  Casey Kneale, Steven D. Brown ·

Exploratory data analysis is crucial for developing and understanding classification models from high-dimensional datasets. We explore the utility of a new unsupervised tree ensemble called uncharted forest for visualizing class associations, sample-sample associations, class heterogeneity, and uninformative classes for provenance studies. The uncharted forest algorithm can be used to partition data using random selections of variables and metrics based on statistical spread. After each tree is grown, a tally of the samples that arrive at every terminal node is maintained. Those tallies are stored in single sample association matrix and a likelihood measure for each sample being partitioned with one another can be made. That matrix may be readily viewed as a heat map, and the probabilities can be quantified via new metrics that account for class or cluster membership. We display the advantages and limitations of using this technique by applying it to two classification datasets and three provenance study datasets. Two of the metrics presented in this paper are also compared with widely used metrics from two algorithms that have variance-based clustering mechanisms.

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