
A Hybrid Feature Selection Method for Improve the Accuracy of Medical Classification Process
Author(s) -
Maria Mohammad Yousef
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of innovative technology and exploring engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2278-3075
DOI - 10.35940/ijitee.a9624.1111121
Subject(s) - feature selection , dimensionality reduction , artificial intelligence , support vector machine , preprocessor , computer science , curse of dimensionality , k nearest neighbors algorithm , data pre processing , pattern recognition (psychology) , machine learning , data mining , feature (linguistics) , process (computing) , selection (genetic algorithm) , philosophy , linguistics , operating system
Generally, medical dataset classification has become one of the biggest problems in data mining research. Every database has a given number of features but it is observed that some of these features can be redundant and can be harmful as well as disrupt the process of classification and this problem is known as a high dimensionality problem. Dimensionality reduction in data preprocessing is critical for increasing the performance of machine learning algorithms. Besides the contribution of feature subset selection in dimensionality reduction gives a significant improvement in classification accuracy. In this paper, we proposed a new hybrid feature selection approach based on (GA assisted by KNN) to deal with issues of high dimensionality in biomedical data classification. The proposed method first applies the combination between GA and KNN for feature selection to find the optimal subset of features where the classification accuracy of the k-Nearest Neighbor (kNN) method is used as the fitness function for GA. After selecting the best-suggested subset of features, Support Vector Machine (SVM) are used as the classifiers. The proposed method experiments on five medical datasets of the UCI Machine Learning Repository. It is noted that the suggested technique performs admirably on these databases, achieving higher classification accuracy while using fewer features.