K-mean for Wine data set

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Ganesh
Ganesh on 27 Aug 2013
Answered: Paul Munro on 21 Feb 2023
Hi,
I performed a K-mean algorithm command on the wine data set from UCI respiratory. This dataset contains chemical analysis of 178 wines, derived from three different cultivars. Wine type is based on 13 continuous features.
Here's the command load 'wine_data.txt';
[IDX,C,sumd,D] = kmeans(wine_data,3,... 'start','sample',... 'Replicates',100,... 'maxiter',1000, 'display','final');
The final Best total sum of distances is 2.37069e+06. This result is way far from the reported K-means solution from the literature, which is aournd 18,061. Is the K-mean solution of Matlab stuck in local minima? Please advice. Thanks.
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the cyclist
the cyclist on 27 Aug 2013
For anyone who is interested in helping out on this one, the data set is here: http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/Wine

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Answers (4)

Shashank Prasanna
Shashank Prasanna on 27 Aug 2013
Ganesh, what distance metric does the 'literature' use?
The kmeans default is 'sqEuclidean'. You have to make sure you are comparing the same metric. Try changing it to cityblock or any of the other options:

Ganesh
Ganesh on 27 Aug 2013
Thanks for the reply Shashank The literature used 'sqEuclidean' and so did I.
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tryhard
tryhard on 29 Aug 2013
Could you post a link to the relevant article. I get the same result you do. It seems like they might have performed pre-processing on the data of some sort.

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gheorghe gardu
gheorghe gardu on 1 Nov 2015
I would like to ask if you could post the Matlab code that you have used ? I would like to thank you in advance.

Paul Munro
Paul Munro on 21 Feb 2023
The large distance sum you report makes me think that you did not rescale the data. Variable 13 is in the thousands and will overwhelm the effect of the other variables. You will probably get better results if you rescale the variables separately (Z scoring for example).

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