# ktaucenters package: Robust and efficient Clustering

Juan D. Gonzalez, Victor J. Yohai, Ruben H. Zamar

## Introduction

This package implements a clustering algorithm similar to kmeans, it has two main advantages:

Clustering procedure is carried out by minimizing the overall robust scale so-called tau scale (see Yohai Gonzalez, Yohai and Zamar 2019 arxiv:1906.08198).

# How to use the package ktaucenters

Example 1: behavior when data are clean

First we load the package ktaucenters

rm(list=ls())
library(ktaucenters)

We generate synthetic data (three cluster well separated), and apply a classic algorithm (kmeans) and the robust ktaucenters. Results and code are shown below.

# Generate synthetic data (three cluster well separated)
set.seed(1)
Z <- rnorm(600);
mues <- rep(c(-4, 0, 4), 200)
X <-  matrix(Z + mues, ncol=2)

### Applying the ROBUST algortihm  ####
ktau_output <- ktaucenters(X, K=3,nstart=10)
### Applying the classic algortihm  ####
kmeans_output <- kmeans(X,centers=3,nstart=10)

### plotting the center results 
plot(X,main=" Efficiency")
points(ktau_output$centers,pch=19,col=2,cex=2)
points(kmeans_output$centers,pch=17,col=3,cex=2)
legend(-6,6,pch=c(19,17),col=c(2,3),cex=1,legend=c("ktau centers" ,"kmeans centers"))

Example 2: behavior in the presence of outliers

We contaminate the previous data by replacing 60 observations to outliers located in a bounding box that contains the clean data. Then we apply kmeans and ktaucenters algorithms.

# Generate 60 sintetic outliers (contamination level 20%)
X[sample(1:300,60), ] <- matrix(runif( 40, 2* min(X), 2 * max(X) ),
                                ncol = 2, nrow = 60)

### Applying the ROBUST algortihm  ####
ktau_output <- ktaucenters(X, K=3,nstart=10)
### Applying the classic algortihm  ####
kmeans_output <- kmeans(X,centers=3,nstart=10)

plotting the estimated centers

plot(X,main=" Robustness ")
points(ktau_output$centers,pch=19,col=2,cex=2)
points(kmeans_output$centers,pch=17,col=3,cex=2)
legend(-10,10,pch=c(19,17),col=c(2,3),cex=1,legend=c("ktau centers" ,"kmeans centers"))

As it can be observed in Figure kmeans center were very influenced by outliers, while ktaucenters results are still razonable.

Example 3: Showing clusters and outliers detection procedure

Continuation from Example 2, for outliers recognition purposes we can see the ktau_output$outliers that indicates the indices that may be considered as outliers, on the other hand, the labels of each cluster found by the algorithm are coded with integers between 1 and K (in this case K=3), the variable ktau_output$clusters contains that information.

plot(X,main=" Estimated clusters and outliers detection ")
## plottig clusters 
for (j in 1:3){
  points(X[ktau_output$cluster==j, ], col=j+1)
}

## plottig outliers 
points(X[ktau_output$outliers, ], pch=19, col=1, cex=1)
legend(7,15,pch=c(1,1,1,19),col=c(2,3,4,1),cex=1,
       legend=c("cluster 1" ,"cluster 2","cluster 3","detected \n outliers"),bg = "gray")

The final figure contains clusters and outliers detected.

# Improved-ktaucenters

The algorithm ktaucenter works well under noisy data, but fails when clusters have different size, shape and orientation, an algorithm suitable for this sort of data is improvektaucenters. To show how this algorithm works we use the data set so-called M5data from package tclust: tclust: Robust Trimmed Clustering, tclust. M5 data were generated by three normal bivariate distributions with different scales, one of the components is very overlapped with another one. A 10% background noise is added uniformly

::: {#usage .section .level3} ### usage

First we load the data, then, run the improvedktaucenters function.

## load non spherical datadata 
library("tclust")
data("M5data")
X=M5data[,1:2]
true.clusters=M5data[,3]
### done ###### 

#run the function to estimate clusters
improved_output=improvedktaucenters(X,K=3,cutoff=0.95)

We keep the results in the variable improved_output, that is a list that contains the fields outliers and cluster, among others. For example, we can have access to the cluster labeled as 2 by typing

X[improved_output$cluster==2, ].

If we want to know the values of outliers, type

X[improved_output$outliers, ].

By using these commands, it is easy to estimate the original clusters by means of improvedktaucenters routine.

For more information about this package see the vignette ktaucenters_vignette.pdf.

The preprint arxiv:1906.08198) contains comparision with other robust clustering procedures as well as technical details and applications.