Galar Idoate, Mikel

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Galar Idoate

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Mikel

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Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas

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ISC. Institute of Smart Cities

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 23
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A framework for radial data comparison and its application to fingerprint analysis
    (Elsevier, 2016) Marco Detchart, Cedric; Cerrón González, Juan; Miguel Turullols, Laura de; López Molina, Carlos; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Automatika eta Konputazioa; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Automática y Computación; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    This work tackles the comparison of radial data, and proposes comparison measures that are further applied to fingerprint analysis. First, we study the similarity of scalar and non-scalar radial data, elaborated on previous works in fuzzy set theory. This study leads to the concepts of restricted radial equivalence function and Radial Similarity Measure, which model the perceived similarity between scalar and vectorial pieces of radial data, respectively. Second, the utility of these functions is tested in the context of fingerprint analysis, and more specifically, in the singular point detection. With this aim, a novel Template-based Singular Point Detection method is proposed, which takes advantage of these functions. Finally, their suitability is tested in different fingerprint databases. Different Similarity Measures are considered to show the flexibility offered by these measures and the behaviour of the new method is compared with well-known singular point detection methods.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    d-Choquet integrals: Choquet integrals based on dissimilarities
    (Elsevier, 2020) Bustince Sola, Humberto; Mesiar, Radko; Fernández Fernández, Francisco Javier; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; Altalhi, A. H.; Pereira Dimuro, Graçaliz; Bedregal, Benjamin; Takáč, Zdenko; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, PJUPNA13
    The paper introduces a new class of functions from [0,1]n to [0,n] called d-Choquet integrals. These functions are a generalization of the 'standard' Choquet integral obtained by replacing the difference in the definition of the usual Choquet integral by a dissimilarity function. In particular, the class of all d-Choquet integrals encompasses the class of all 'standard' Choquet integrals but the use of dissimilarities provides higher flexibility and generality. We show that some d-Choquet integrals are aggregation/pre-aggregation/averaging/functions and some of them are not. The conditions under which this happens are stated and other properties of the d-Choquet integrals are studied.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Discrete IV dG-Choquet integrals with respect to admissible orders
    (Elsevier, 2021) Takáč, Zdenko; Uriz Martín, Mikel Xabier; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Ingeniaritza Elektrikoa, Elektronikoaren eta Telekomunikazio Ingeniaritzaren; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    In this work, we introduce the notion of dG-Choquet integral, which generalizes the discrete Choquet integral replacing, in the first place, the difference between inputs represented by closed subintervals of the unit interval [0,1] by a dissimilarity function; and we also replace the sum by more general appropriate functions. We show that particular cases of dG-Choquet integral are both the discrete Choquet integral and the d-Choquet integral. We define interval-valued fuzzy measures and we show how they can be used with dG-Choquet integrals to define an interval-valued discrete Choquet integral which is monotone with respect to admissible orders. We finally study the validity of this interval-valued Choquet integral by means of an illustrative example in a classification problem. © 2021
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Dissimilarity based choquet integrals
    (Springer, 2020) Bustince Sola, Humberto; Mesiar, Radko; Fernández Fernández, Francisco Javier; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika
    In this paper, in order to generalize the Choquet integral, we replace the difference between inputs in its definition by a restricted dissimilarity function and refer to the obtained function as d-Choquet integral. For some particular restricted dissimilarity function the corresponding d-Choquet integral with respect to a fuzzy measure is just the ‘standard’ Choquet integral with respect to the same fuzzy measure. Hence, the class of all d-Choquet integrals encompasses the class of all 'standard' Choquet integrals. This approach allows us to construct a wide class of new functions, d-Choquet integrals, that are possibly, unlike the 'standard' Choquet integral, outside of the scope of aggregation functions since the monotonicity is, for some restricted dissimilarity function, violated and also the range of such functions can be wider than [0, 1], in particular it can be [0, n].
  • PublicationOpen Access
    On the influence of admissible orders in IVOVO
    (Springer, 2019) Uriz Martín, Mikel Xabier; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, PJUPNA13
    It is known that when dealing with interval-valued data, there exist problems associated with the non-existence of a total order. In this work we investigate a reformulation of an interval-valued decomposition strategy for multi-class problems called IVOVO, and we analyze the effectiveness of considering different admissible orders in the aggregation phase of IVOVO. We demonstrate that the choice of an appropriate admissible order allows the method to obtain significant differences in terms of accuracy.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A survey of fingerprint classification Part II: experimental analysis and ensemble proposal
    (Elsevier, 2015) Galar Idoate, Mikel; Derrac, Joaquín; Peralta, Daniel; Triguero, Isaac; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; López Molina, Carlos; García, Salvador; Benítez, José Manuel; Pagola Barrio, Miguel; Barrenechea Tartas, Edurne; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Herrera, Francisco; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    In the first part of this paper we reviewed the fingerprint classification literature from two different perspectives: the feature extraction and the classifier learning. Aiming at answering the question of which among the reviewed methods would perform better in a real implementation we end up in a discussion which showed the difficulty in answering this question. No previous comparison exists in the literature and comparisons among papers are done with different experimental frameworks. Moreover, the difficulty in implementing published methods was stated due to the lack of details in their description, parameters and the fact that no source code is shared. For this reason, in this paper we will go through a deep experimental study following the proposed double perspective. In order to do so, we have carefully implemented some of the most relevant feature extraction methods according to the explanations found in the corresponding papers and we have tested their performance with different classifiers, including those specific proposals made by the authors. Our aim is to develop an objective experimental study in a common framework, which has not been done before and which can serve as a baseline for future works on the topic. This way, we will not only test their quality, but their reusability by other researchers and will be able to indicate which proposals could be considered for future developments. Furthermore, we will show that combining different feature extraction models in an ensemble can lead to a superior performance, significantly increasing the results obtained by individual models.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    An empirical study on supervised and unsupervised fuzzy measure construction methods in highly imbalanced classification
    (IEEE, 2020) Uriz Martín, Mikel Xabier; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    The design of an ensemble of classifiers involves the definition of an aggregation mechanism that produces a single response obtained from the information provided by the classifiers. A specific aggregation methodology that has been studied in the literature is the use of fuzzy integrals, such as the Choquet or the Sugeno integral, where the associated fuzzy measure tries to represent the interaction existing between the classifiers of the ensemble. However, defining the big number of coefficients of a fuzzy measure is not a trivial task and therefore, many different algorithms have been proposed. These can be split into supervised and unsupervised, each class having different learning mechanisms and particularities. Since there is no clear knowledge about the correct method to be used, in this work we propose an experimental study for comparing the performance of eight different learning algorithms under the same framework of imbalanced dataset. Moreover, we also compare the specific fuzzy integral (Choquet or Sugeno) and their synergies with the different fuzzy measure construction methods.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    FUZZ-EQ: a data equalizer for boosting the discrimination power of fuzzy classifiers
    (Elsevier, 2020) Uriz Martín, Mikel Xabier; Elkano Ilintxeta, Mikel; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, PJUPNA13
    The definition of linguistic terms is a critical part of the construction of any fuzzy classifier. Fuzzy partitioning methods (FPMs) range from simple uniform partitioning to sophisticated optimization algorithms. In this paper we present FUZZ-EQ, a preprocessing algorithm that facilitates the construc-tion of meaningful fuzzy partitions regardless of the FPM used. The proposed approach is radically different from any existing FPM: instead of adjusting the fuzzy sets to the training data, FUZZ-EQ adjusts the training data to a hypothetical uniform partition before applying any FPM. To do so, the original data distribution is transformed into a uniform distribution by applying the probability integral transform. FUZZ-EQ allows FPMs to provide classifiers with more granularity on high density regions, increasing the overall discrimination capability. Additionally, we describe the procedure to reverse this transformation and recover the interpretability of linguistic terms. To assess the effectiveness of our proposal, we conducted an extensive empirical study consisting of 41 classification tasks and 9 fuzzy classifiers with different FPMs, rule induction algorithms, and rule structures. We also tested the scalability of FUZZ-EQ in Big Data classification problems such as HIGGS, with 11 million examples. Experimental results reveal that FUZZ-EQ significantly boosted the classification performance of those classifiers using the same linguistic terms for all rules, including state-of-the-art classifiers such as FARC-HD or IVTURS.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    CFM-BD: a distributed rule induction algorithm for building compact fuzzy models in Big Data classification problems
    (IEEE, 2020) Elkano Ilintxeta, Mikel; Sanz Delgado, José Antonio; Barrenechea Tartas, Edurne; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Estatistika, Informatika eta Matematika; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Estadística, Informática y Matemáticas
    Interpretability has always been a major concern for fuzzy rule-based classifiers. The usage of human-readable models allows them to explain the reasoning behind their predictions and decisions. However, when it comes to Big Data classification problems, fuzzy rule based classifiers have not been able to maintain the good tradeoff between accuracy and interpretability that has characterized these techniques in non-Big-Data environments. The most accurate methods build models composed of a large number of rules and fuzzy sets that are too complex, while those approaches focusing on interpretability do not provide state-of-the-art discrimination capabilities. In this paper, we propose a new distributed learning algorithm named CFM-BD to construct accurate and compact fuzzy rule-based classification systems for Big Data. This method has been specifically designed from scratch for Big Data problems and does not adapt or extend any existing algorithm. The proposed learning process consists of three stages: Preprocessing based on the probability integral transform theorem; rule induction inspired by CHI-BD and Apriori algorithms; and rule selection by means of a global evolutionary optimization. We conducted a complete empirical study to test the performance of our approach in terms of accuracy, complexity, and runtime. The results obtained were compared and contrasted with four state-of-the-art fuzzy classifiers for Big Data (FBDT, FMDT, Chi-Spark-RS, and CHI-BD). According to this study, CFM-BD is able to provide competitive discrimination capabilities using significantly simpler models composed of a few rules of less than three antecedents, employing five linguistic labels for all variables.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A survey on fingerprint minutiae-based local matching for verification and identification: taxonomy and experimental evaluation
    (Elsevier, 2015) Peralta, Daniel; Galar Idoate, Mikel; Triguero, Isaac; Paternain Dallo, Daniel; García, Salvador; Barrenechea Tartas, Edurne; Benítez, José Manuel; Bustince Sola, Humberto; Herrera, Francisco; Automática y Computación; Automatika eta Konputazioa
    Fingerprint recognition has found a reliable application for verification or identification of people in biometrics. Globally, fingerprints can be viewed as valuable traits due to several perceptions observed by the experts; such as the distinctiveness and the permanence on humans and the performance in real applications. Among the main stages of fingerprint recognition, the automated matching phase has received much attention from the early years up to nowadays. This paper is devoted to review and categorize the vast number of fingerprint matching methods proposed in the specialized literature. In particular, we focus on local minutiae-based matching algorithms, which provide good performance with an excellent trade-off between efficacy and efficiency. We identify the main properties and differences of existing methods. Then, we include an experimental evaluation involving the most representative local minutiae-based matching models in both verification and evaluation tasks. The results obtained will be discussed in detail, supporting the description of future directions.