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Isolation-based anomaly detection using nearest-neighbor ensembles

Version 2 2024-06-05, 09:35
Version 1 2018-01-16, 13:32
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 09:35 authored by TR Bandaragoda, KM Ting, D Albrecht, FT Liu, Ye ZhuYe Zhu, JR Wells
The first successful isolation-based anomaly detector, ie, iForest, uses trees as a means to perform isolation. Although it has been shown to have advantages over existing anomaly detectors, we have identified 4 weaknesses, ie, its inability to detect local anomalies, anomalies with a high percentage of irrelevant attributes, anomalies that are masked by axis-parallel clusters, and anomalies in multimodal data sets. To overcome these weaknesses, this paper shows that an alternative isolation mechanism is required and thus presents iNNE or isolation using Nearest Neighbor Ensemble. Although relying on nearest neighbors, iNNE runs significantly faster than the existing nearest neighbor-based methods such as the local outlier factor, especially in data sets having thousands of dimensions or millions of instances. This is because the proposed method has linear time complexity and constant space complexity.

History

Journal

Computational intelligence

Volume

34

Pagination

968-998

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0824-7935

eISSN

1467-8640

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Wiley Periodicals

Issue

4

Publisher

Wiley