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CORR
2010
Springer

Rules of Thumb for Information Acquisition from Large and Redundant Data

13 years 9 months ago
Rules of Thumb for Information Acquisition from Large and Redundant Data
We develop an abstract model of information acquisition from redundant data. We assume a random sampling process from data which contain information with bias and are interested in the fraction of information we expect to learn as function of (i) the sampled fraction (recall) and (ii) varying bias of information (redundancy distributions). We develop two rules of thumb with varying robustness. We first show that, when information bias follows a Zipf distribution, the 80-20 rule or Pareto principle does surprisingly not hold, and we rather expect to learn less than 40% of the information when randomly sampling 20% of the overall data. We then analytically prove that for large data sets, randomized sampling from power-law distributions leads to "truncated distributions" with the same power-law exponent. This second rule is very robust and also holds for distributions that deviate substantially from a strict power law. We further give one particular family of powerlaw functions ...
Wolfgang Gatterbauer
Added 22 Mar 2011
Updated 22 Mar 2011
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where CORR
Authors Wolfgang Gatterbauer
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