Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

December 10, 2010

Efficient Spectral Neighborhood Blocking for Entity Resolution

Filed under: Entity Resolution — Patrick Durusau @ 6:54 am

Efficient Spectral Neighborhood Blocking for Entity Resolution Authors: Liangcai Shu, Aiyou Chen, Ming Xiong, Weiyi Meng

Abstract:

In many telecom and web applications, there is a need to identify whether data objects in the same source or different sources represent the same entity in the real-world. This problem arises for subscribers in multiple services, customers in supply chain management, and users in social networks when there lacks a unique identifier across multiple data sources to represent a real-world entity. Entity resolution is to identify and discover objects in the data sets that refer to the same entity in the real world. We investigate the entity resolution problem for large data sets where efficient and scalable solutions are needed. We propose a novel unsupervised blocking algorithm, namely SPectrAl Neighborhood (SPAN), which constructs a fast bipartition tree for the records based on spectral clustering such that real entities can be identified accurately by neighborhood records in the tree. There are two major novel aspects in our approach: 1) We develop a fast algorithm that performs spectral clustering without computing pairwise similarities explicitly, which dramatically improves the scalability of the standard spectral clustering algorithm; 2) We utilize a stopping criterion specified by Newman-Girvan modularity in the bipartition process. Our experimental results with both synthetic and real-world data demonstrate that SPAN is robust and outperforms other blocking algorithms in terms of accuracy while it is efficient and scalable to deal with large data sets.

Entity resolution is to identify and discover objects in the data sets that refer to the same entity in the real world.

Modulo my usual qualms about the real world language, this sounds useful for the construction of topic maps.

Questions:

  1. How would you suggest integrating this methodology into a topic map construction process? (3-5 pages, no citations)
  2. How would you suggest integrating rule based entity identification into this methodology? (3-5 pages, no citations)
  3. Is precision of identification an operational requirement? (3-5 pages, no citations)

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