PARMA-CC: A Family of Parallel Multiphase Approximate Cluster Combining Algorithms
Journal article, 2023

Clustering is a common task in data analysis applications. Despite the extensive literature, the continuously increasing volumes of data produced by sensors (e.g., rates of several MB/s by 3D scanners such as LIDAR sensors), and the time-sensitivity of the applications leveraging the clustering outcomes (e.g., detecting critical situations such as detecting boundary crossing from a robot arm that could injure human beings) demand for efficient data clustering algorithms that can effectively utilize the increasing computational capacities of modern hardware. To that end, we leverage approximation and parallelization, where the former is to scale down the amount of data, and the latter is to scale up the computation. Regarding parallelization, we explore a design space for synchronization and workload distribution among the threads. As we study different parts of the design space, we propose representative Parallel Multiphase Approximate Cluster Combining, abbreviated as PARMA-CC, algorithms.

We show that PARMA-CC algorithms yield equivalent clustering outcomes despite their different approaches. Furthermore, we show that certain PARMA-CC algorithms can achieve higher efficiency with respect to certain properties of the data to be clustered. Generally speaking, in PARMA-CC algorithms, parallel threads compute summaries associated with clusters of data (sub)sets. As the threads concurrently combine the summaries, they construct a comprehensive summary of the sets of clusters. By approximating a cluster with its respective geometrical summaries, PARMA-CC algorithms scale well with increased data volumes, and, by computing and efficiently combining the summaries in parallel, they enable latency improvements. PARMA-CC algorithms utilize special data structures that enable parallelism through in-place data processing. As we show in our analysis and evaluation, PARMA-CC algorithms can complement and outperform well-established methods, with significantly better scalability, while still providing highly accurate results in a variety of data sets, even with skewed data distributions, which cause the traditional approaches to exhibit their worst-case behaviour.

Parallel Clustering

Synchronization

Data Structures

Approximation

Author

Amir Keramatian

Network and Systems

Vincenzo Massimiliano Gulisano

Network and Systems

Marina Papatriantafilou

Network and Systems

Philippas Tsigas

Network and Systems

Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing

0743-7315 (ISSN) 1096-0848 (eISSN)

Vol. 177 68-88

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Swedish Research Council (VR) (2016-03800), 2017-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.

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Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) (GMT14-0032), 2016-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.

Subject Categories

Computer Engineering

Media Engineering

Computer Science

Computer Systems

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Production

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

DOI

10.1016/j.jpdc.2023.02.001

More information

Latest update

5/17/2023