Publication | Closed Access
Clustering with qualitative information
133
Citations
15
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
Cluster ComputingEngineeringSymbolic Data AnalysisNetwork AnalysisComplete GraphsGraph ProcessingUnsupervised Machine LearningData ScienceData MiningStructural Graph TheoryDiscrete MathematicsCombinatorial OptimizationStatisticsDocument ClusteringKnowledge DiscoveryGraph GComputer ScienceNetwork ScienceGraph TheoryBusinessGraph AnalysisQualitative InformationData ModelingPairwise Judgments
We consider the problem of clustering a collection of elements based on pairwise judgments of similarity and dissimilarity. N. Bansal et al. (2002) cast the problem thus: given a graph G whose edges are labeled "+" (similar) or "-" (dissimilar), partition the vertices into clusters so that the number of pairs correctly (resp. incorrectly) classified with respect to the input labeling is maximized (resp. minimized). Complete graphs, where the classifier labels every edge, and general graphs, where some edges are not labeled, are both worth studying. We answer several questions left open by N. Bansal et al. (2002) and provide a sound overview of clustering with qualitative information. We give a factor 4 approximation for minimization on complete graphs, and a factor O(log n) approximation for general graphs. For the maximization version, a PTAS for complete graphs is shown by N. Bansal et al. (2002); we give a factor 0.7664 approximation for general graphs, noting that a PTAS is unlikely by proving APX-hardness. We also prove the APX-hardness of minimization on complete graphs.
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