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Mining the FIRST Astronomical Survey

Imola K. Fodor and Chandrika Kamath Center for Applied Scientific Computing Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory IPAM Workshop January, 2002. Mining the FIRST Astronomical Survey. Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-Centimeters (FIRST). On-going sky survey, started in 1993

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Mining the FIRST Astronomical Survey

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  1. Imola K. Fodor and Chandrika KamathCenter for Applied Scientific ComputingLawrence Livermore National LaboratoryIPAM Workshop January, 2002 Mining the FIRST Astronomical Survey

  2. Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-Centimeters (FIRST) • On-going sky survey, started in 1993 • When completed, will cover more than 10,000 deg to a flux density limit of 1.0 mJy (milli-Jansky) • Current coverage is about 8,000 deg • more than 32,000 two-million pixel images • There are about 90 radio sources/deg • Data available at http://sundog.stsci.edu NRAO Very Large Array (VLA)

  3. One goal of FIRST is to identify radio galaxies with a bent-double morphology • A bent-double galaxy is … • Problem: there is no definition of “bent-double” • Rough characteristic: there is a radio emitting “core”, along with a number of (not necessarily two!) side- components that are “bent” around the core • Astronomers search manually for bent-doubles Bent-doubles Non bent-doubles

  4. FIRST images “Good” features Bent/nonbent coordinates Pre-processing Pattern recognition Sapphire: use data mining to enhance the visual search for bent-doubles • Use galaxies classified by astronomers to model the binary response variable Y • Find features X and model f(X) with desired accuracy • Aim: 10% misclassification error, as manual classification is not more accurate Denoising Feature extraction Dimension reduction Classification

  5. The FIRST catalog is based on fitting 2D elliptical Gaussians to denoised images Image Map 1150 pixels Catalog 720K entries 1550 pixels 32K image maps, 7.1MB each 64 pixels Catalog entry (CE) Radio source (RS)

  6. A first pre-processing step is to identify potential features to discriminate bents • For the FIRST data, we extracted various features based on • radio intensities, angles, distances, … • For galaxies with 3 entries • a total of 103 features • three sets of single features, three pairs of double features, and the triple features • possible redundancies • Reduce dimension using • domain knowledge • EDA • PCA • GLM step-wise model selection

  7. P M A N c b B a C Triple features for three catalog entries

  8. Using exploratory data analysis (EDA), we reduced the number of features to 25 • Use EDA techniques such as • box-plots • multivariate plots • parallel-coordinate plots • correlation matrix • to • explore the data • find unusual observations • eliminate correlations among the features • Call these EDA features

  9. Example parallel coordinate plot: nine variables split by bentness category • x 3/2 sky regions for bent/non-bent X: unusual x x x x large negative correlation Bent Non-bent

  10. Principal component analysis (PCA) finds linear combinations of variables Suppose we have p features and we want a linear combination with max. variance By the spectral decomposition theorem, the first PC, has maximal variance, and The total variance is preserved, Dimension reduction: use first k PCs as new “features” orthogonal,

  11. We used PCA differently to reduce the number of original features to 20 • The first 20 PCs explain 90% of the variance • PCs are hard to interpret – instead of using 20 PCs, keep 20 of the original variables • Multivariate Analysis (Mardia, Kent, Bibby) • consider the last PC, with the smallest variance • find the largest (in abs value) coefficient , and discard the corresponding original variable • repeat the procedure w/ the second-to-last PC, and iterate until only 20 variables remain • Call these PCA features

  12. We also used step-wise model selection to reduce the number of variables • Binary response: Y = {bent, non-bent} • Explanatory variables: features • Logistic regression, step-wise model selection with the AIC as a measure of goodness (minimize -log-likelihood, with a penalty term for large models) • Cannot use all 103 features because of correlations • We identified the features selected by EDA or PCA • stepwise model selection => GLM 2features (25) • We identified the features selected by EDA and PCA • stepwise model selection => GLM 3features (10) • stepwise model selection, including second-order interactions => GLM 4features (9, +5 interactions)

  13. Pattern recognition uses the features from pre-processing to classify the data Training data Extract Features Create Classifier Decision Tree GLM Check for Accuracy Extract Features for Unclassified Data Update Training Data Show Results and Obtain Score Apply Classifier to Unclassified Data An iterative and interactive classification process

  14. radius > a? color? color? We use decision trees to classify the radio sources into bents and non-bents • Use information gain to split • : set of examples at a node • : number of classes • : split into two • : number of class in

  15. Leaf node w/ 11 non-bents Leaf node w/ 4 bents Leaf node w/ 145 items, (145-4) bents, and 4 non-bents Decision tree created with all the features: Tree 1 • Resubstitution error, train/test (90%) set: 2.8% • Cross-validation error, train/validate (10%) set: 5.3%

  16. Decision tree created with the EDA and PCA features: Tree 2 • Resubstitution error: 1.7% • Cross-validation error: 5.3%

  17. Decision tree created with the GLM 3 features: Tree 3 • Resubstitution error: 2.8% • Cross-validation error: 0% • Using fewer, well-selected variables results in smaller and more accurate trees

  18. We also used generalized linear models (GLMs) to classify the galaxies • Linear models explain response variables in terms of linear combinations of explanatory variables • Least-squares estimate solves • No restrictions on the range of fitted values • GLMs allow such restrictions by modeling where g() is a monotone increasing link function

  19. Logistic regression is a special GLM suitable for modeling binary responses • Y={0,1} • Logit link and variance functions • Likelihood non-linear in parameters, no closed-form solution: iteratively reweighted least squares to find • Given , where is {0,1} according to {a=False, a=True}, and the fraction is generally taken to be 0.5

  20. GLM created with the GLM 2 features

  21. GLM created with the GLM 3 features

  22. GLM created with the GLM 4 features

  23. GLM 2 GLM 3 GLM 4 Mean 18.74% 7.84% 4.00% SE 4.34% 0.91% 1.14% Misclassification errors of best models are below the desired 10% in training set • Careful selection of variables reduces error • Trees are less sensitive to input features than GLMs • GLM 4 has lowest misclassification errors Misclassification errors based on 10 ten-fold cross-validations in the training set

  24. Tree1 Tree2 Tree3 GLM2 GLM3 GLM4 All 6 Non-bent 5412 4628 5660 5118 11080 4340 637 Bent 9647 10431 9399 9941 3979 10719 2577 Our methods identified the “interesting” part of the FIRST dataset • 15,059 three-entry radio sources in the 2000 catalog • 2,577 labeled as bent by all six methods • Astronomers can start by exploring the smaller set • Visually explore random samples to assess the percentage of false positives and missed bents Classification results for the entire 2000 catalog

  25. Example classifications for previously unlabeled galaxies are encouraging • The labels commonly assigned by the six methods are correct in the examples below Bent Non-bent

  26. Summary • Described how data mining can help identify radio galaxies with bent-double morphology • Illustrated specific data mining steps • data pre-processing is very crucial • In our experience, data mining is semi-automatic • interaction and feedback required at many stages • domain knowledge is essential • Multi-disciplinary collaboration is challenging, but rewarding • astronomy - computer science - statistics • There is always room for improvement • alternative techniques • your feedback welcome!

  27. The Sapphire team: supporting a multi-disciplinary endeavor • Chandrika Kamath (Project Lead) • Erick Cantú-Paz • Imola K. Fodor • Nu A. Tang • Thanks to the FIRST scientists: Robert Becker, Michael Gregg, David Helfand, Sally Laurent-Muehleisen, and Rick White www.llnl.gov/casc/sapphire UCRL-JC-145672. This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by University of California Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under contract W-7405-Eng-48.

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