Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
8, Nov-Dec 2014
Dr. R. M. Tugnayat
Department of CSE,
G. H. Raisoni College of Engineering,
Nagpur, India
Principal,
S. S. Agnihotri College of Engineering,
Wardha, India
Ashlesha S. Nagdive
Department of IT,
G. H. Raisoni College of Engineering,
Nagpur, India
Abstract: Mining is such as automated technology which facilitates us to find the relations between various parameters and predicts the future
outcomes of business sector. Mining tools (data mining, text mining, and web mining) are used to foreseen the future, profit, investment relations
in large databases for BI. In this paper, we review various data mining tools and techniques and their performance in BI sectors. Finally, we shall
state some of the important factors to be considered while designing & developing a BI framework using data mining techniques for various
sectors.
Business Intelligence (BI) has turned out to be a predictable technological advantage in the last couple of years, for the large enterprises
(especially Mobile Technology Ventures). Such ventures could afford to buy, implement and maintain BI solutions. Recently, small and medium
size enterprises all over the globe have understood the competitive and financial benefits of BI. However, limited IT budgets of small companies
and BIs high total cost of ownership have created a gap between large and small enterprises where small enterprises do not become fortunate to
avail the virtues of BI because of the affordability factor.
This Paper provides the systematic study and analysis of various factors (Data Mining techniques, BI framework and their effects on designing a
successful automated decision making system). It presents the strong knowledge foundation so that one can give a proper justice to achieve BI
objectives.
Keywords: Data Mining, Data visualization, Data warehousing, Mobile Technology, Nanocube, Spatiotemporal dataset, OLAP, Business
Intelligence.
I. INTRODUCTION
A.
Data Mining:
Data mining is the technology comprises of tools and
techniques for the extraction and analysis of knowledge in
systematic format from the large database. Sometimes, the
large amount of data is very hard, complex and time
consuming to process and derive the expected outcome from
it. Larger the size if database, larger will be the processing
overload, delay for processing. Furthermore, the extraction
of exact required knowledge for analyse is crucial when it
comes for the BI sector. The prior objective of any BI is to
achieve business patterns. These BI patterns [1] are further
being processed and analysed for designing new business
goals. Data mining uses tools and techniques for the
following [2].
Prediction
Classification
Segmentation/clustering
Affinity analysis using association rules.
B.
BI Terms [3]:
There are several BI terms currently in discussion such
as,
operational databases,
OLTP,
Data warehouse,
data mart,
OLAP and OLAP Server,
Drill down/up,
ad-hoc query and analysis,
dimension,
Fact/Measure,
KPI,
dashboard, and
scorecard.
D.
BI Tools [3]:
BI tools are the tools & techniques in the form of
application software designed to
Report,
Analyze and
Present data.
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Manish P. Tembhurkar et al, International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science, 5 (8), NovDec, 2014,128-133
B.
Classification:
Data Mining Models
Predictive
Apriori Algorithm
Eclat Algorithm
FP- growth Algorithm
Clustering
K-Means
Bi-Clustering
Density Based
Agglomerative Hierarchic
Descriptive
Classification
C 4.5
K-Nearest Neighbor Algorithm
Nave Bayes
ADA BOOS
Regression
Generalized Linear Models
Support Vector Machine
Figure 2. Classification of Data Mining Algorithms
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Manish P. Tembhurkar et al, International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science, 5 (8), NovDec, 2014,128-133
Table I.
Sr. No.
Techniques
Algorithm Name
NANOCUBES
OLAP Datacubes
[8]
ASSOCIATION
RULE MINING
Apriori
Algorithm [12]
CLASSIFICATION
C4.5
REGRESSION
Support Vector
Machines
f.
g.
h.
Limitations
Image sensor
Display
Mobile operating system*
A.
130
Manish P. Tembhurkar et al, International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science, 5 (8), NovDec, 2014,128-133
.
Figure 3. Mobile technologies index - relative progress of components (source: IHS Supply Database) [15]
Table II.
Sr.
No.
Company
Country
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
China Mobile
Vodafone
China Unicom
Airtel
Amrica Mvil
Telefnica
Axiata
Orange
VimpelCom Ltd.
China Telecom
MTN Group
Etisalat
Telenor
14.
TeliaSonera
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
T-Mobile
Saudi Telecom Company (STC)
Reliance Communications
Verizon Wireless
Idea Cellular
AT&T Mobility
MTS
Telecom Italia Mobile (TIM)
BSNL
Tata Teleservices
Turkcell
Aircel
Smart Communications
Maxis Communications
MegaFon
Ooredoo
China
UK
China
India
Mexico
Spain
Malaysia
France
Russia
China
South Africa
UAE
Norway
Swedan/
Finland
Germany
Saudi Arabia
India
USA
India
USA
Russia
Italy
India
India
Turkey
India
Philippines
Malaysia
Russia
Qatar
a)
Total
subscribers
(Millions)
775.6
419.4
285.7
275.2
269.9
254.7
239.7
231.5
209
185
175.98
167
166
160
142.5
139
135.88
122
113.9
116.01
106.07
102.5
96.28
77.4
70.7
66.79
72.5
63.71
62
60.53
Automation
due
to
Information
Communications Technology (ICT)
b) Business needs of service providers
c)
Total
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
Total
Africa
Asia
Europe
North
America
and
Manish P. Tembhurkar et al, International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science, 5 (8), NovDec, 2014,128-133
iii.
UAE
167
Europe
1924.37
France
231.5
Germany
142.5
Italy
102.5
Norway
166
Russia
377.07
Spain
254.7
Swedan/ Finland
160
Turkey
70.7
UK
419.4
North America
507.91
Mexico
269.9
Region/ Country
USA
238.01
Africa
175.98
Grand Total
5362.45
South Africa
175.98
Asia
2754.19
China
1246.3
India
765.45
Malaysia
239.7
Malaysia
63.71
Philippines
72.5
Qatar
60.53
Saudi Arabia
139
C.
D.
E.
Data warehousing
Implementation of BI tools
Analyzing outputs
Some of the BI tools in the market are,
SAP Business Objects [17];
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Manish P. Tembhurkar et al, International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science, 5 (8), NovDec, 2014,128-133
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
VI. ACKNOWLEDGMENT
One of us (M. P. Tembhurkar.) thanks RBI, Financial
Access 2013-CGAP for providing Mobile consumer database
& Raman Chitkara, Founder of Mobile Innovations Forecast
for guiding us through the necessity of BI in Mobile
Technology sector.
[12]
[13]
[14]
VII. REFERENCES
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
http://www.ics.uci.edu/~welling/classnotes/papers_class/S
VM.pdf
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
[19]
[20]
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