McDPC: multi-center density peak clustering |
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Authors: | Wang Yizhang Wang Di Zhang Xiaofeng Pang Wei Miao Chunyan Tan Ah-Hwee Zhou You |
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Affiliation: | 1.College of Computer Science and Technology, Jilin University, Changchun, China ;2.Key Laboratory of Symbolic Computation and Knowledge Engineering of Ministry of Education, Jilin University, Changchun, China ;3.Joint NTU-UBC Research Centre of Excellence in Active Living for the Elderly, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore ;4.Joint NTU-WeBank Research Centre on FinTech, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore ;5.Department of Computer Science, Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), Shenzhen, China ;6.School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK ;7.School of Computer Science and Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore ; |
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Abstract: | Density peak clustering (DPC) is a recently developed density-based clustering algorithm that achieves competitive performance in a non-iterative manner. DPC is capable of effectively handling clusters with single density peak (single center), i.e., based on DPC’s hypothesis, one and only one data point is chosen as the center of any cluster. However, DPC may fail to identify clusters with multiple density peaks (multi-centers) and may not be able to identify natural clusters whose centers have relatively lower local density. To address these limitations, we propose a novel clustering algorithm based on a hierarchical approach, named multi-center density peak clustering (McDPC). Firstly, based on a widely adopted hypothesis that the potential cluster centers are relatively far away from each other. McDPC obtains centers of the initial micro-clusters (named representative data points) whose minimum distance to the other higher-density data points are relatively larger. Secondly, the representative data points are autonomously categorized into different density levels. Finally, McDPC deals with micro-clusters at each level and if necessary, merges the micro-clusters at a specific level into one cluster to identify multi-center clusters. To evaluate the effectiveness of our proposed McDPC algorithm, we conduct experiments on both synthetic and real-world datasets and benchmark the performance of McDPC against other state-of-the-art clustering algorithms. We also apply McDPC to perform image segmentation and facial recognition to further demonstrate its capability in dealing with real-world applications. The experimental results show that our method achieves promising performance. |
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