Fast indexing and visualization of metric data sets using slim-trees

Many recent database applications need to deal with similarity queries. For such applications, it is important to measure the similarity between two objects using the distance between them. Focusing on this problem, this paper proposes the slim-tree, a new dynamic tree for organizing metric data set...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE transactions on knowledge and data engineering Vol. 14; no. 2; pp. 244 - 260
Main Authors: Traina, C., Traina, A., Faloutsos, C., Seeger, B.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: New York IEEE 01.03.2002
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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ISSN:1041-4347, 1558-2191
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Many recent database applications need to deal with similarity queries. For such applications, it is important to measure the similarity between two objects using the distance between them. Focusing on this problem, this paper proposes the slim-tree, a new dynamic tree for organizing metric data sets in pages of fixed size. The slim-tree uses the triangle inequality to prune the distance calculations that are needed to answer similarity queries over objects in metric spaces. The proposed insertion algorithm uses new policies to select the nodes where incoming objects are stored. When a node overflows, the slim-tree uses a minimal spanning tree to help with the splitting. The new insertion algorithm leads to a tree with high storage utilization and improved query performance. The slim-tree is a metric access method that tackles the problem of overlaps between nodes in metric spaces and that allows one to minimize the overlap. The proposed "fat-factor" is a way to quantify whether a given tree can be improved and also to compare two trees. We show how to use the fat-factor to achieve accurate estimates of the search performance and also how to improve the performance of a metric tree through the proposed "slim-down" algorithm. This paper also presents a new tool in the slim-tree's arsenal of resources, aimed at visualizing it. Visualization is a powerful tool for interactive data mining and for the visual tracking of the behavior of a tree under updates. Finally, we present a formula to estimate the number of disk accesses in range queries. Results from experiments with real and synthetic data sets show that the new slim-tree algorithms lead to performance improvements. These results show that the slim-tree outperforms the M-tree by up to 200% for range queries. For insertion and splitting, the minimal-spanning-tree-based algorithm achieves up to 40 times faster insertions. We observed improvements of up to 40% in range queries after applying the slim-down algorithm.
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ISSN:1041-4347
1558-2191
DOI:10.1109/69.991715