Abstract

Clustering ensemble (CE), renowned for its robust and potent consensus capability, has garnered significant attention from scholars in recent years and has achieved numerous noteworthy breakthroughs. Nevertheless, three key issues persist: (1) the majority of CE selection strategies rely on preset parameters or empirical knowledge as a premise, lacking adaptive selectivity; (2) the construction of co-association matrix is excessively one-sided; (3) the CE method lacks a more macro perspective to reconcile the conflicts among different consensus results. To address these aforementioned problems, a dual-level clustering ensemble algorithm with three consensus strategies is proposed. Firstly, a backward clustering ensemble selection framework is devised, and its built-in selection strategy can adaptively eliminate redundant members. Then, at the base clustering consensus level, taking into account the interplay between actual spatial location information and the co-occurrence frequency, two modified relation matrices are reconstructed, resulting in the development of two consensus methods with different modes. Additionally, at the CE consensus level with a broader perspective, an adjustable Dempster–Shafer evidence theory is developed as the third consensus method in present algorithm to dynamically fuse multiple ensemble results. Experimental results demonstrate that compared to seven other state-of-the-art and typical CE algorithms, the proposed algorithm exhibits exceptional consensus ability and robustness.

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