MiNB: Minority Sensitive Naïve Bayesian Algorithm for Multi-Class Classification of Unbalanced Data

  • Ghadeer Written by
  • Update: 30/06/2022

MiNB: Minority Sensitive Naïve Bayesian Algorithm for Multi-Class Classification of Unbalanced Data

Pratikkumar Barot

Computer Engineering Department, Gujarat Technological University, India

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Harikrishna Jethva

Computer Engineering Department, Gujarat Technological University, India

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Abstract: The unbalanced nature of data makes it tough to achieve the desire performance goal for classification algorithms. The sub-optimal prediction system isn't a viable solution due to the high misclassification cost of minority events. Thus accurate imbalanced data classification could be a path changer for prediction in domains like medical diagnosis, judiciary, and disaster management systems. To date, most of the existing studies of imbalanced data are for the binary class dataset and supported by data sampling techniques that suffer from loss of information and over-fitting. In this paper, we present the modified naïve Bayesian algorithm for unbalanced data classification that eliminates the requirement of data level sampling. We compared our proposed model with the data sampling technique and cost-sensitive techniques. We use minority sensitive TP Rate, class-specific misclassification rate, and overall performance parameters such as accuracy, f-measure and G-mean. The result shows that our proposed algorithm shows a more optimal result for unbalanced data classification. Results shows reduction in misclassification rate and improve predictive performance for the minority class.

Keywords: Imbalanced data learning, weighted naïve bayesian, cost-sensitive learning, multi-class unbalanced data.

Received October 13, 2020; accepted December 13, 2021
https://doi.org/10.34028/iajit/19/4/5

Full text

Read 643 times
Top
We use cookies to improve our website. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. More details…