Scalable processing of snapshot and continuous nearest-neighbor queries over one-dimensional uncertain data
Author(s) -
Jinchuan Chen,
Reynold Cheng,
Mohamed F. Mokbel,
Chi-Yin Chow
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
the vldb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.653
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 0949-877X
pISSN - 1066-8888
DOI - 10.1007/s00778-009-0152-3
Subject(s) - computer science , scalability , data mining , k nearest neighbors algorithm , online aggregation , query optimization , probabilistic logic , snapshot (computer storage) , sargable , database , information retrieval , search engine , web search query , machine learning , artificial intelligence
In several emerging and important applications, such as location-based services, sensor monitoring and biological databases, the values of the data items are inherently imprecise. A useful query class for these data is the Probabilistic Nearest-Neighbor Query (PNN), which yields the IDs of objects for being the closest neighbor of a query point, together with the objects' probability values. Previous studies showed that this query takes a long time to evaluate. To address this problem, we propose the Constrained Nearest-Neighbor Query (C-PNN), which returns the IDs of objects whose probabilities are higher than some threshold, with a given error bound in the answers. We show that the C-PNN can be answered efficiently with verifiers. These are methods that derive the lower and upper bounds of answer probabilities, so that an object can be quickly decided on whether it should be included in the answer. We design five verifiers, which can be used on uncertain data with arbitrary probability density functions. We further develop a partial evaluation technique, so that a user can obtain some answers quickly, without waiting for the whole query evaluation process to be completed (which may incur a high response time). In addition, we examine the maintenance of a long-standing, or continuous C-PNN query. This query requires any update to be applied to the result immediately, in order to reflect the changes to the database values (e.g., due to the change of the location of a moving object). We design an incremental update method based on previous query answers, in order to reduce the amount of I/O and CPU cost in maintaining the correctness of the answers to such a query. Performance evaluation on realistic datasets show that our methods are capable of yielding timely and accurate results. © 2009 Springer-Verlag.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
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