Title :
SAX Discretization Does Not Guarantee Equiprobable Symbols
Author :
Butler, Matthew ; Kazakov, Dimitar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of York, York, UK
Abstract :
In time series analysis research, there is a strong interest in discrete representations of real valued data streams. One approach still considered state-of-the-art is the Symbolic Aggregate Approximation (SAX) algorithm. The interest of this paper concerns the SAX assumption of data being highly Gaussian and the use of the standard normal curve to choose partitions to discretize the data. The SAX approach chooses partitions on the standard normal curve that would produce an equal probability for each symbol. This procedure is generally valid as a time series is normalized to have μ = 0 and σ = 1. However, there exists a caveat to this assumption of equi-probability due to the intermediate step of Piecewise Aggregate Approximation (PAA). We show in this paper that when PAA is applied, the distribution of the data is altered, resulting in a shrinking standard deviation that is proportional to the number of points used to create a segment of the PAA representation and the degree of auto-correlation within the series. Data that exhibits statistically significant auto-correlation is less affected by this shrinking distribution. As the standard deviation of the data contracts, the mean remains the same, however the distribution is no longer standard normal and therefore the partitions based on the standard normal curve are no longer valid for the assumption of equal probability.
Keywords :
Gaussian distribution; data analysis; normal distribution; time series; PAA representation; SAX algorithm; SAX discretization; data discretization; data distribution; discrete representation; equal probability assumption; equiprobable symbols; highly Gaussian data; piecewise aggregate approximation; real valued data streams; series autocorrelation; shrinking distribution; standard deviation; standard normal curve; symbol probability; symbolic aggregate approximation; time series analysis; time series normalization; Aggregates; Approximation algorithms; Approximation methods; Contracts; Noise; Standards; Time series analysis; SAX; auto-correlation; discretization; time series analysis;
Journal_Title :
Knowledge and Data Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TKDE.2014.2382882