Abstract
The explosion of the high-dimensional dataset in the scientific repository has been encouraging interdisciplinary research on data mining, pattern recognition and bioinformatics. The fundamental problem of the individual Feature Selection (FS) method is extracting informative features for classification model and to seek for the malignant disease at low computational cost. In addition, existing FS approaches overlook the fact that for a given cardinality, there can be several subsets with similar information. This paper introduces a novel hybrid FS algorithm, called Filter-Wrapper Feature Selection (FWFS) for a classification problem and also addresses the limitations of existing methods. In the proposed model, the front-end filter ranking method as Conditional Mutual Information Maximization (CMIM) selects the high ranked feature subset while the succeeding method as Binary Genetic Algorithm (BGA) accelerates the search in identifying the significant feature subsets. One of the merits of the proposed method is that, unlike an exhaustive method, it speeds up the FS procedure without lancing of classification accuracy on reduced dataset when a learning model is applied to the selected subsets of features. The efficacy of the proposed (FWFS) method is examined by Naive Bayes (NB) classifier which works as a fitness function. The effectiveness of the selected feature subset is evaluated using numerous classifiers on five biological datasets and five UCI datasets of a varied dimensionality and number of instances. The experimental results emphasize that the proposed method provides additional support to the significant reduction of the features and outperforms the existing methods. For microarray data-sets, we found the lowest classification accuracy is 61.24% on SRBCT dataset and highest accuracy is 99.32% on Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). In UCI datasets, the lowest classification accuracy is 40.04% on the Lymphography using k-nearest neighbor (k-NN) and highest classification accuracy is 99.05% on the ionosphere using support vector machine (SVM).
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More From: International Journal of Computational Intelligence and Applications
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