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1 Algorithms for Large Data Sets Ziv Bar-Yossef Lecture 11 June 1, 2005 http://www.ee.technion.ac.il/courses/049011
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2 Sketching
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3 Outline Syntactic clustering of the web Locality sensitive hash functions Resemblance and shingling Min-wise independent permutations The sketching model Hamming distance Edit distance
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4 Motivation: Near-Duplicate Elimination Many web pages are duplicates or near- duplicates of other pages Mirror sites FAQs, manuals, legal documents Different versions of the same document Plagiarism Duplicates are bad for search engines Increase index size Harm quality of search results Question: How to efficiently process the repository of crawled pages and eliminate (near)- duplicates?
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5 Syntactic Clustering of the Web [Broder, Glassman, Manasse, Zweig 97] U: space of all possible documents S U: collection of documents sim: U × U [0,1]: a similarity measure among documents If p,q are very similar sim(p,q) is close to 1 If p,q are very unsimilar, sim(p,q) is close to 0 Usually: sim(p,q) = 1 – d(p,q), where d(p,q) is a normalized distance between p and q. G: a graph on S: p,q are connected by an edge iff sim(p,q) t (t = threshold) Goal: find the connected components of G
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6 Challenges S is huge Web has 10 billion pages Documents are not compressed Needs many disks to store S Each sim computation is costly Documents in S should be processed in a stream Main memory is tine relative to |S| Cannot afford more than O(|S|) time How to create the graph G? Naively, requires |S| passes and |S| 2 similarity computations
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7 Sketching Schemes T = a small set (|S| < |T| << |U|) A sketching scheme for sim: Compression function: a randomized mapping : U T Reconstruction function: : T T [0,1] For every pair p,q, with high probability ( (p), (q)) sim(p,q)
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8 Syntactic Clustering by Sketching 1. P empty table of size |S| 2. G empty graph on |S| nodes 3. for i = 1,…,|S| 4. read document p i from the stream 5. P[i] (p i ) 6. for i = 1,…,|S| 7. for j = 1,…,|S| 8. if ( (P[i],P[j]) t) 9. add edge (i,j) to G 10. output connected components of G
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9 Analysis Can compute sketches in one pass Table P can be stored in a single file on a single machine Creating G requires |S| 2 applications of Easier than full-fledged computations of sim Quadratic time is still a problem Connected components algorithm is heavy but feasible
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10 Locality Sensitive Hashing (LSH) [Indyk, Motwani, 98] A special kind of sketching schemes H = { h | h: U T }: a family of hash functions H is locality sensitive w.r.t. sim if for all p,q U, Pr[h(p) = h(q)] = sim(p,q). Probability is over random choice of h from H Probability of collision = similarity between p and q
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11 Syntactic Clustering by LSH 1. P empty table of size |S| 2. G empty graph on |S| nodes 3. for i = 1,…,|S| 4. read document p i from the stream 5. P[i] h(p i ) 6. sort P and group by value 7. output groups
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12 Analysis Can compute hash values in one pass Table P can be stored in a single file on a single machine Sorting and grouping takes O(|S| log |S|) simple comparisons Each group A consists of pages whose hash value is the same By LSH property, they are likely to be similar to each other
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13 Shingling and Resemblance [Broder et al 97] tokens: words, numbers, HTML tags, etc. tokenization(p): sequence of tokens produced from document p w: a small integer S w (p) = w-shingling of p = set all distinct contiguous subsequences of tokenization(p) of length w. Ex: p = “a rose is a rose is a rose”, w = 4 S w (p) = { (a rose is a), (rose is a rose), (is a rose is) } resemblance w (p,q) =
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14 LSH for Resemblance resemblance w (p,q) = = a random permutation on w induces a random order on all length w sequences of tokens also induces a random order on any subset X W For each such subset and for each x X, Pr(min ( (X)) = x) = 1/|X| LSH for resemblance: h(p) = min( (S w (p))) S w (p ) S w (q )
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15 LSH for Resemblance (cont.) Lemma: Proof:
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16 Min-Wise Independent Permutations [Broder, Charikar, Frieze, Mitzenmacher, 98] Usual problem: Storing takes too much space O(| | w log | | w ) bits to represent Use small families of permutations A family = { | is a permutation on w } is min-wise independent, if For all subsets X w and for all x X, Pr(min ( (X)) = x) = 1/|X| Explicit constructions of small families of “approximately” min-wise independent permutations [Indyk 98]
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17 The Sketching Model Alice Bob Referee d(x,y) ≤ k x y x) y) d(x,y) ≥ r Shared Randomness k vs. r Gap Problem d(x,y) ≤ k or d(x,y) ≥ r Decide which of the two holds. Approximation Promise: Goal:
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18 Applications Large data sets Clustering Nearest Neighbor schemes Data streams Management of Files over the Network Differential backup Synchronization Theory Low distortion embeddings Simultaneous messages communication complexity
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19 Known Sketching Schemes Resemblance [Broder, Glassman, Manasse, Zweig 97], [Broder, Charikar, Frieze, Mitzenmacher 98] Hamming distance [Kushilevitz, Ostrovsky, Rabani 98], [Indyk, Motwani 98] [Feigenbaum,Ishai,Malkin,Nissim,Strauss,Wright 01] Cosine similarity [Charikar 02] Earth mover distance [Charikar 02] Edit distance [Bar-Yossef, Jayram, Krauthgamer, Kumar 04]
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20 Sketching Algorithm for Hamming Distance [Kushilevitz, Ostrovsky, Rabani 98] x,y: binary strings of length n HD(x,y) = # of positions in which x,y differ HD(x,y) = | { i | x i y i } | Ex: x = 10101, y = 01010, HD(x,y) = 5 Goal: If HD(x,y) ≤ k, output “accept” w.p. 1 - If HD(x,y) ≥ 2k, output “reject” w.p. 1 - KOR algorithm: O(log(1/ )) size sketch.
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21 The KOR Algorithm Shared randomness: n i.i.d. random bits r 1,…,r n, where Basic sketch: h(x) = ( i x i r i ) mod 2 Full sketch: (x) = (h 1 (x),…,h t (x)) t = O(log(1/ )) h 1,…,h t are generated independently like h Reconstruction: 1. for j = 1,…,t do 2. if (h j (x) = h j (y)) then 3. z j 1 4. else 5. z j 0 6. if avg(z 1,…,z t ) > 11/18 output “accept” and else output “reject”
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22 KOR: Analysis dd Note: # of terms in the sum = HD(x,y) Given HD(x,y) independent random bits, each with probability 1/2k to be 1, what is the probability that their parity is 0?
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23 KOR: Analysis (cont.) r 1,…,r m : m independent random bits For each j, Pr(r j = 1) = What is Pr[ j r j = 0)? Can view distribution of each bit as a mixture of two distributions: Dist A (with probability 1 - 2 ): the bit 0 w.p. 1 Dist B (with probability 2 ): a uniformly chosen bit Note: If all bits “choose” Dist A, then the parity is 0 w.p. 1 If one of the m bits “chooses” Dist B, then the parity is 0 w.p. ½ Hence,
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24 KOR Analysis (cont.) ff Therefore, If HD(x,y) ≤ k, then Pr[h(x) = h(y)] ≥ 1/2 + 1/2e 4/6 = 12/18 If HD(x,y) ≥ 2k, then Pr[h(x) = h(y)] ≤ 1/2 + 1/2e 2 10/18 Define: If HD(x,y) ≤ k, then E[Z] ≥ 12/18 If HD(x,y) ≥ 2k, then E[Z] ≤ 10/18 By Chernoff, t = O(log(1/ )) enough to guarantee: If HD(x,y) ≤ k, then Z > 11/18 w.p. 1 - If HD(x,y) ≥ 2k, then Z ≤ 11/18 w.h.p 1 -
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25 Edit Distance x 2 n, y 2 m Minimum number of character insertions, deletions and substitutions that transform x to y. Examples: ED(00000, 1111) = 5 ED(01010, 10101) = 2 Applications Genomics Text processing Web search For simplicity: m = n, = {0,1}. ED(x,y):
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26 Sketching Algorithm for Edit Distance [Bar-Yossef,Jayram,Krauthgamer,Kumar 04] x,y: binary strings of length n Goal: If ED(x,y) ≤ k, output “accept” w.p. 1 - If ED(x,y) ≥ ((kn) 2/3 ), output “reject” w.p. ≥ 1 - BJKK algorithm: O(log(1/ )) size sketch.
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27 Basic Framework Underlying Principle ED(x,y) is small iff x and y share many common substrings at nearby positions. S x = set of pairs of the form ( ,h(i)) a substring of x h(i): a “locality sensitive” encoding of the substring’s position x SxSx y SySy ED(x,y) small iff intersection S x Å S y large common substrings at nearby positions
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28 Basic Framework (cont.) Need to estimate size of symmetric difference Hamming distance computation of characteristic vectors Use O(log(1/ )) size sketches [KOR] x SxSx y SySy ED(x,y) small iff symmetric difference S x S y small Reduced Edit Distance to Hamming Distance
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29 11 22 33 11 22 33 Encoding Scheme Gap: k vs. O((kn) 2/3 ) x y B = n 2/3 /k 1/3, W = n/B 1 S x = { S y = { 234567891011121314 1234567891011121314 ( 1,1), ( 1,1), ( 2,1), ( 2,1), ( 3,2), ( 3,2), … … B windows of size W each.,( i, win(i)),…,( i, win(i)),…
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30 Analysis jj ii x y 1234567891011121314 1234567891011121314 Case 1: ED(x,y) · k If i is “unmarked”, it has a matching “companion” j ( i,win(i)) 2 S x n S y, only if: either i is “marked” or i is unmarked, but win(i) win(j) At most kB marked substrings At most k * n/W = kB companions with mismatched windows Therefore, Ham(S x,S y ) · 4kB
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31 Analysis (cont.) 22 11 x y 1234567891011121314 1234567891011121314 Case 2: Ham(S x,S y ) · 8kB If i has a “companion” j and win(i) = win(j), can align i with j using at most W operations Otherwise, substitute first character of i At most 8kB substrings of x have no companion Therefore, ED(x,y) · 8kB + W * n/B = O((kn) 2/3 ) B+1 2B+1 B-1
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32 End of Lecture 11
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