International audienceData mining is the study of how to extract information from data and express it as useful knowledge. One of its most important subfields, pattern mining, involves searching and enumerating interesting patterns in data. Various aspects of pattern mining are studied in the theory of computation and statistics. In the last decade, the pattern mining community has witnessed a sharp shift from efficiency-based approaches to methods which can extract more meaningful patterns. Recently, new methods adapting results from studies of economic efficiency and multi-criteria decision analyses such as Pareto efficiency, or skylines, have been studied. Within pattern mining, this novel line of research allows the easy expression of preferences according to a dominance relation. This approach is useful from a user-preference point of view and tends to promote the use of pattern mining algorithms for non-experts. We present a significant extension of our previous work [1] and [2] on the discovery of skyline patterns (or “skypatterns”) based on the theoretical relationships with condensed representations of patterns. We show how these relationships facilitate the computation of skypatterns and we exploit them to propose a flexible and efficient approach to mine skypatterns using a dynamic constraint satisfaction problems (CSP) framework.We present a unified methodology of our different approaches towards the same goal. This work is supported by an extensive experimental study allowing us to illustrate the strengths and weaknesses of each approach
International audience—Sequential pattern mining under various constraints is a challenging data mining task. The paper provides a generic framework based on constraint programming to discover sequence patterns defined by constraints on local patterns (e.g., gap, regular expressions) or constraints on patterns involving combination of local patterns such as relevant subgroups and top-k patterns. This framework enables the user to mine in a declarative way both kinds of patterns. The solving step is done by exploiting the machinery of Constraint Programming. For complex patterns involving combination of local patterns, we improve the mining step by using dynamic CSP. Finally, we present two case studies in biomedical information extraction and stylistic analysis in linguistics
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