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Oxford 05-oct-2012

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Algorithmic details of how to do on-line k-means clustering
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Fast Single-pass k- means Clustering
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Page 1: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Fast Single-pass k-means Clustering

Page 2: Oxford 05-oct-2012

whoami – Ted Dunning

• Chief Application Architect, MapR Technologies• Committer, member, Apache Software Foundation– particularly Mahout, Zookeeper and Drill

• Contact me [email protected]@[email protected]@ted_dunning

Page 3: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Agenda

• Rationale• Theory– clusterable data, k-mean failure modes, sketches

• Algorithms– ball k-means, surrogate methods

• Implementation– searchers, vectors, clusterers

• Results• Application

Page 4: Oxford 05-oct-2012

RATIONALE

Page 5: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Why k-means?

• Clustering allows fast search– k-nn models allow agile modeling– lots of data points, 108 typical– lots of clusters, 104 typical

• Model features– Distance to nearest centroids– Poor man’s manifold discovery

Page 6: Oxford 05-oct-2012

What is Quality?

• Robust clustering not a goal– we don’t care if the same clustering is replicated

• Generalization to unseen data critical– number of points per cluster– distance distributions– target function distributions– model performance stability

Page 7: Oxford 05-oct-2012

An Example

Page 8: Oxford 05-oct-2012

The Problem

• Spirals are a classic “counter” example for k-means

• Classic low dimensional manifold with added noise

• But clustering still makes modeling work well

Page 9: Oxford 05-oct-2012

An Example

Page 10: Oxford 05-oct-2012

An Example

Page 11: Oxford 05-oct-2012

The Cluster Proximity Features

• Every point can be described by the nearest cluster – 4.3 bits per point in this case– Significant error that can be decreased (to a point)

by increasing number of clusters• Or by the proximity to the 2 nearest clusters (2

x 4.3 bits + 1 sign bit + 2 proximities)– Error is negligible– Unwinds the data into a simple representation

Page 12: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Diagonalized Cluster Proximity

Page 13: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Lots of Clusters Are Fine

Page 14: Oxford 05-oct-2012

The Limiting Case

• Too many clusters lead to over-fitting• Which we mediate by averaging over several

nearby clusters• In the limit we get k-nn modeling– and probably use k-means to speed up search

Page 15: Oxford 05-oct-2012

THEORY

Page 16: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Intuitive Theory

• Traditionally, minimize over all distributions– optimization is NP-complete– that isn’t like real data

• Recently, assume well-clusterable data

• Interesting approximation bounds provable

Page 17: Oxford 05-oct-2012

For Example

Grouping these two clusters

seriously hurts squared distance

Page 18: Oxford 05-oct-2012

ALGORITHMS

Page 19: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Lloyd’s Algorithm• Part of CS folk-lore• Developed in the late 50’s for signal quantization, published in 80’s

initialize k cluster centroids somehowfor each of many iterations:for each data point:assign point to nearest clusterrecompute cluster centroids from points assigned to clusters

• Highly variable quality, several restarts recommended

Page 20: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Typical k-means Failure

Selecting two seeds here cannot be

fixed with Lloyds

Result is that these two clusters get glued

together

Page 21: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Ball k-means

• Provably better for highly clusterable data• Tries to find initial centroids in each “core” of each real

clusters• Avoids outliers in centroid computation

initialize centroids randomly with distance maximizing tendencyfor each of a very few iterations:

for each data point:assign point to nearest cluster

recompute centroids using only points much closer than closest cluster

Page 22: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Still Not a Win

• Ball k-means is nearly guaranteed with k = 2• Probability of successful seeding drops

exponentially with k• Alternative strategy has high probability of

success, but takes O(nkd + k3d) time

Page 23: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Surrogate Method

• Start with sloppy clustering into κ = k log n clusters• Use this sketch as a weighted surrogate for the

data• Cluster surrogate data using ball k-means• Results are provably good for highly clusterable

data• Sloppy clustering is on-line• Surrogate can be kept in memory• Ball k-means pass can be done at any time

Page 24: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Algorithm Costs

• O(k d log n) per point per iteration for Lloyd’s algorithm

• Number of iterations not well known• Iteration > log n reasonable assumption

Page 25: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Algorithm Costs

• Surrogate methods– fast, sloppy single pass clustering with κ = k log n– fast sloppy search for nearest cluster, O(d log κ) =

O(d (log k + log log n)) per point– fast, in-memory, high-quality clustering of κ

weighted centroidsO(κ k d + k3 d) = O(k2 d log n + k3 d) for small k, high qualityO(κ d log k) or O(d log κ log k) for larger k, looser quality

– result is k high-quality centroids• Even the sloppy clusters may suffice

Page 26: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Algorithm Costs

• How much faster for the sketch phase?– take k = 2000, d = 10, n = 100,000 – k d log n = 2000 x 10 x 26 = 500,000– log k + log log n = 11 + 5 = 17– 30,000 times faster is a bona fide big deal

Page 27: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Pragmatics

• But this requires a fast search internally• Have to cluster on the fly for sketch• Have to guarantee sketch quality• Previous methods had very high complexity

Page 28: Oxford 05-oct-2012

How It Works• For each point

– Find approximately nearest centroid (distance = d)– If (d > threshold) new centroid– Else if (u > d/threshold) new cluster– Else add to nearest centroid

• If centroids > κ ≈ C log N– Recursively cluster centroids with higher threshold

• Result is large set of centroids– these provide approximation of original distribution– we can cluster centroids to get a close approximation of clustering original– or we can just use the result directly

Page 29: Oxford 05-oct-2012

IMPLEMENTATION

Page 30: Oxford 05-oct-2012

How Can We Search Faster?

• First rule: don’t do it– If we can eliminate most candidates, we can do less work– Projection search and k-means search

• Second rule: don’t do it– We can convert big floating point math to clever bit-wise integer

math– Locality sensitive hashing

• Third rule: reduce dimensionality– Projection search– Random projection for very high dimension

Page 31: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Projection Search

total ordering!

Page 32: Oxford 05-oct-2012

How Many Projections?

Page 33: Oxford 05-oct-2012

LSH Search

• Each random projection produces independent sign bit• If two vectors have the same projected sign bits, they

probably point in the same direction (i.e. cos θ ≈ 1)• Distance in L2 is closely related to cosine

• We can replace (some) vector dot products with long integer XOR

Page 34: Oxford 05-oct-2012

LSH Bit-match Versus Cosine

Page 35: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Results with 32 Bits

Page 36: Oxford 05-oct-2012

The Internals

• Mechanism for extending Mahout Vectors– DelegatingVector, WeightedVector, Centroid

• Searcher interface– ProjectionSearch, KmeansSearch, LshSearch, Brute

• Super-fast clustering– Kmeans, StreamingKmeans

Page 37: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Parallel Speedup?

Page 38: Oxford 05-oct-2012

What About Map-Reduce?

• Map-reduce implementation is nearly trivial– Compute surrogate on each split– Total surrogate is union of all partial surrogates– Do in-memory clustering on total surrogate

• Threaded version shows linear speedup already– Map-reduce speedup is likely, not entirely

guaranteed

Page 39: Oxford 05-oct-2012

How Well Does it Work?

• Theoretical guarantees for well clusterable data– Shindler, Wong and Meyerson, NIPS, 2011

• Evaluation on synthetic data– Rough clustering produces correct surrogates– Ball k-means strategy 1 performance is very good

with large k

Page 40: Oxford 05-oct-2012

APPLICATION

Page 41: Oxford 05-oct-2012

The Business Case

• Our customer has 100 million cards in circulation

• Quick and accurate decision-making is key.– Marketing offers– Fraud prevention

Page 42: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Opportunity

• Demand of modeling is increasing rapidly

• So they are testing something simpler and more agile

• Like k-nearest neighbor

Page 43: Oxford 05-oct-2012

What’s that?

• Find the k nearest training examples – lookalike customers

• This is easy … but hard– easy because it is so conceptually simple and you don’t have

knobs to turn or models to build– hard because of the stunning amount of math– also hard because we need top 50,000 results

• Initial rapid prototype was massively too slow– 3K queries x 200K examples takes hours– needed 20M x 25M in the same time

Page 44: Oxford 05-oct-2012

K-Nearest Neighbor Example

Page 45: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Required Scale and Speed and Accuracy

• Want 20 million queries against 25 million references in 10,000 s

• Should be able to search > 100 million references

• Should be linearly and horizontally scalable• Must have >50% overlap against reference

search

Page 46: Oxford 05-oct-2012

How Hard is That?

• 20 M x 25 M x 100 Flop = 50 P Flop

• 1 CPU = 5 Gflops

• We need 10 M CPU seconds => 10,000 CPU’s

• Real-world efficiency losses may increase that by 10x

• Not good!

Page 47: Oxford 05-oct-2012

K-means Search

• First do clustering with lots (thousands) of clusters

• Then search nearest clusters to find nearest points

• We win if we find >50% overlap with “true” answer

• We lose if we can’t cluster super-fast– more on this later

Page 48: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Lots of Clusters Are Fine

Page 49: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Lots of Clusters Are Fine

Page 50: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Some Details

• Clumpy data works better– Real data is clumpy

• Speedups of 100-200x seem practical with 50% overlap– Projection search and LSH give additional 100x

• More experiments needed

Page 51: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Summary

• Nearest neighbor algorithms can be blazing fast

• But you need blazing fast clustering– Which we now have

Page 52: Oxford 05-oct-2012

Contact Me!• We’re hiring at MapR in US and Europe

• MapR software available for research use

• Come get the slides at http://www.mapr.com/company/events/speaking/strata-10-2-12

• Contact me at [email protected] or @ted_dunning


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