Online Program

Saturday, October 22
Knowledge
Community
Influence
Sat, Oct 22, 4:30 PM - 5:15 PM
Carolina Ballroom
Poster Session 6

A General Unimodal Null Distribution with Applications to Cluster Significance Testing (303495)

*Erika S. Helgeson, University of North Carolina 

Cluster analysis is an unsupervised learning strategy that can be employed to identify subgroups of observations in data sets of unknown structure. This strategy is particularly useful for analyzing high-dimensional data such as microarray gene expression data. Many clustering methods are available, but it is challenging to determine if the identified clusters represent distinct subgroups. We propose a novel strategy to investigate the significance of identified clusters by comparing the within-cluster sum of squares from the original data to that produced by clustering an appropriate unimodal null distribution. The null distribution we present for this problem uses kernel density estimation and thus does not require that the data follow any particular distribution. We find that our method can accurately test for the presence of clustering even when the number of features is high.