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T H E H I N D U O P P O R T U N I T I E S A Guide to Better Positions and Better Performance Wednesday, April 16, 2003 |
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HRD COUNSELLING Mining for information
DON"T look now... You are being monitored...! Whenever you
withdraw money from a bank, log on to the Internet, make a phone
call or for that matter, even when you rent a video, the transa
tions are recorded and stored in computers. As a result, a huge
mass of data is piling up in the electronic vaults of companies,
research institutions and government offices.
But why should the data be stored? What is the use of this data?
Till the 1990s, the answer was "not much". But now the society as
a whole as well as all the companies are looking forward for
'data miners', who can use faster analysing tools that can help
sift and analyse the stockpiles of data, turning up surprisingly
valuable information.
What is data mining? And who are data miners?
Data mining can be defined as the exploration and analysis of
large data sets, in order to discover meaningful patterns and
rules. Staring at a huge spreadsheet is not a good way to analyse
any data. The trick is to find effective ways to combine the
computer's power to process data with the human eye's ability to
detect patterns. The techniques of data mining are designed for,
and work best with, large data sets.
And data miners are the people who ascertain the truth of the
assumptions and the assertions made by explorers. They know how
to efficiently process a lot of data. Data miners mine data,
understand the hidden relationships, patterns and trends, and
help their managers or decision makers make effective and
actionable-decisions.
Data mining is a component of a wider process called `knowledge
discovery from databases'. It involves scientists from a wide
range of disciplines, including mathematicians, computer
scientists and statisticians, as well as those working in fields
such as machine learning, artificial intelligence, information
retrieval and pattern recognition.
Many companies today are inundated with information whose
magnitude is exponential. Subsequently, it is hard for decision
makers to make sense of the data they have and arrive at
actionable decisions. They know what they want, but they do not
know what to ask for, more importantly how to ask. The time has
come for user-managers to take this challenge in their own hands.
The ability to handle data mining process independently has
already become a necessity for managers to keep their businesses
ahead of the game.
The 1990's saw the emergence of data-warehousing and data mart
technologies. However, to derive meaningful information by way of
relationship and patterns, statisticians employed elaborate
methodologies. Soon after, machine-learning techniques based on
human learning models emerged. Thus the convergence of database
technologies, machine-learning techniques, and computational
methodologies has lead to the development of current business
data mining technology. Today, data mining is a joint undertaking
of the statistical analysts and data-mining technologists (data
miners). The technologists prepare the data, run the databases
and the data mining software and statisticians identify the
relevant variables, create models and interpret results. Once
actionable decisions are implemented, often the data-mining
department conducts impact analysis periodically.
Data mining has considerable commercial applications, but it can
also be applied in many other fields. Abroad it has been used by
law enforcement agencies to identify criminals - by looking
for patterns and relationships in the texts of statements taken
from dozens or hundreds of suspects. Data mining is also well
suited to the analysis of scientific data, such as those amassed
by astronomers.
Data Mining is a hot concept that it's showing up in non
specialised tools. For example, high-end financial and
statistical analysis, decision-support, and EIS vendors are
adding DM capability to their products. Also, enterprise database
vendors such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard are creating data-
warehouse suites (IBM's Visual Warehouse) or virtual-warehouse
frameworks (HP's Open Warehouse) that include DM tools. sectors
like the banks and research institutes too look out for them.
In today's global corporate environment, data mining technology
plays a crucial role as a decision support tool. Before long
businesses will witness increasing dependence on powerful data
mining tools for reliable and effective decision-making. This
requires thorough, fast and easily accessible supporting
information. The emergence of data miners, equipped with working
knowledge and technological skills and sufficient business savvy
are the immediate solutions to the critical problem of making
effective decisions and of keeping today's corporations
successful.
TINA MARIAM JACOB
tina.mas@cnkonline.com
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