Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/135396
Type: Thesis
Title: Embedding Techniques to Solve Large-scale Entity Resolution
Author: Herath, Samudra Dilrukshi
Issue Date: 2022
School/Discipline: School of Mathematical Sciences
Abstract: Entity resolution (ER) identifies and links records that belong to the same real-world entities, where an entity refer to any real-world object. It is a primary task in data integration. Accurate and efficient ER substantially impacts various commercial, security, and scientific applications. Often, there are no unique identifiers for entities in datasets/databases that would make the ER task easy. Therefore record matching depends on entity identifying attributes and approximate matching techniques. The issues of efficiently handling large-scale data remain an open research problem with the increasing volumes and velocities in modern data collections. Fast, scalable, real-time and approximate entity matching techniques that provide high-quality results are highly demanding. This thesis proposes solutions to address the challenges of lack of test datasets and the demand for fast indexing algorithms in large-scale ER. The shortage of large-scale, real-world datasets with ground truth is a primary concern in developing and testing new ER algorithms. Usually, for many datasets, there is no information on the ground truth or ‘gold standard’ data that specifies if two records correspond to the same entity or not. Moreover, obtaining test data for ER algorithms that use personal identifying keys (e.g., names, addresses) is difficult due to privacy and confidentiality issues. Towards this challenge, we proposed a numerical simulation model that produces realistic large-scale data to test new methods when suitable public datasets are unavailable. One of the important findings of this work is the approximation of vectors that represent entity identification keys and their relationships, e.g., dissimilarities and errors. Indexing techniques reduce the search space and execution time in the ER process. Based on the ideas of the approximate vectors of entity identification keys, we proposed a fast indexing technique (Em-K indexing) suitable for real-time, approximate entity matching in large-scale ER. Our Em-K indexing method provides a quick and accurate block of candidate matches for a querying record by searching an existing reference database. All our solutions are metric-based. We transform metric or non-metric spaces to a lowerdimensional Euclidean space, known as configuration space, using multidimensional scaling (MDS). This thesis discusses how to modify MDS algorithms to solve various ER problems efficiently. We proposed highly efficient and scalable approximation methods that extend the MDS algorithm for large-scale datasets. We empirically demonstrate the improvements of our proposed approaches on several datasets with various parameter settings. The outcomes show that our methods can generate large-scale testing data, perform fast real-time and approximate entity matching, and effectively scale up the mapping capacity of MDS.
Advisor: Glonek, Gary
Dissertation Note: Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Mathematical Sciences, 2022
Keywords: Entity Resolution
Data Matching
Data linkage
Deduplication
record linkage
Multidimensional Scaling
Artificial Neural Networks
Out-of-sample Embedding
Nearest Neighbour Search
Kd-trees
indexing
blocking
data simulation
Provenance: This electronic version is made publicly available by the University of Adelaide in accordance with its open access policy for student theses. Copyright in this thesis remains with the author. This thesis may incorporate third party material which has been used by the author pursuant to Fair Dealing exceptions. If you are the owner of any included third party copyright material you wish to be removed from this electronic version, please complete the take down form located at: http://www.adelaide.edu.au/legals
Appears in Collections:Research Theses

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