08-05-2012, 01:54 PM
Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques
2dw.ppt (Size: 494 KB / Downloads: 89)
What is Data Warehouse?
Defined in many different ways, but not rigorously.
A decision support database that is maintained separately from the organization’s operational database
Support information processing by providing a solid platform of consolidated, historical data for analysis.
“A data warehouse is a subject-oriented, integrated, time-variant, and nonvolatile collection of data in support of management’s decision-making process.”—W. H. Inmon
Data warehousing:
The process of constructing and using data warehouses
Data Warehouse—Integrated
Constructed by integrating multiple, heterogeneous data sources
relational databases, flat files, on-line transaction records
Data cleaning and data integration techniques are applied.
Ensure consistency in naming conventions, encoding structures, attribute measures, etc. among different data sources
E.g., Hotel price: currency, tax, breakfast covered, etc.
When data is moved to the warehouse, it is converted.
Data Warehouse vs. Heterogeneous DBMS
Traditional heterogeneous DB integration:
Build wrappers/mediators on top of heterogeneous databases
Query driven approach
When a query is posed to a client site, a meta-dictionary is used to translate the query into queries appropriate for individual heterogeneous sites involved, and the results are integrated into a global answer set
Complex information filtering, compete for resources
Data warehouse: update-driven, high performance
Information from heterogeneous sources is integrated in advance and stored in warehouses for direct query and analysis
Why Separate Data Warehouse?
High performance for both systems
DBMS— tuned for OLTP: access methods, indexing, concurrency control, recovery
Warehouse—tuned for OLAP: complex OLAP queries, multidimensional view, consolidation.
Different functions and different data:
missing data: Decision support requires historical data which operational DBs do not typically maintain
data consolidation: DS requires consolidation (aggregation, summarization) of data from heterogeneous sources
data quality: different sources typically use inconsistent data representations, codes and formats which have to be reconciled
2dw.ppt (Size: 494 KB / Downloads: 89)
What is Data Warehouse?
Defined in many different ways, but not rigorously.
A decision support database that is maintained separately from the organization’s operational database
Support information processing by providing a solid platform of consolidated, historical data for analysis.
“A data warehouse is a subject-oriented, integrated, time-variant, and nonvolatile collection of data in support of management’s decision-making process.”—W. H. Inmon
Data warehousing:
The process of constructing and using data warehouses
Data Warehouse—Integrated
Constructed by integrating multiple, heterogeneous data sources
relational databases, flat files, on-line transaction records
Data cleaning and data integration techniques are applied.
Ensure consistency in naming conventions, encoding structures, attribute measures, etc. among different data sources
E.g., Hotel price: currency, tax, breakfast covered, etc.
When data is moved to the warehouse, it is converted.
Data Warehouse vs. Heterogeneous DBMS
Traditional heterogeneous DB integration:
Build wrappers/mediators on top of heterogeneous databases
Query driven approach
When a query is posed to a client site, a meta-dictionary is used to translate the query into queries appropriate for individual heterogeneous sites involved, and the results are integrated into a global answer set
Complex information filtering, compete for resources
Data warehouse: update-driven, high performance
Information from heterogeneous sources is integrated in advance and stored in warehouses for direct query and analysis
Why Separate Data Warehouse?
High performance for both systems
DBMS— tuned for OLTP: access methods, indexing, concurrency control, recovery
Warehouse—tuned for OLAP: complex OLAP queries, multidimensional view, consolidation.
Different functions and different data:
missing data: Decision support requires historical data which operational DBs do not typically maintain
data consolidation: DS requires consolidation (aggregation, summarization) of data from heterogeneous sources
data quality: different sources typically use inconsistent data representations, codes and formats which have to be reconciled