| data mining |
Searching large volumes of data looking for patterns that accurately predict behavior in customers and prospects.
Ãâó: www.adobe.com/products/vdp/glossary.html
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| data warehouse |
1. An information infrastructure that enables businesses to access and analyze detailed data and trends.
Ãâó: www.adobe.com/products/vdp/glossary.html
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| data mining |
The process of using statistical techniques to discover subtle relationships between data items, and the construction of predictive models based on them. The process is not the same as just using an OLAP tool to find exceptional items. Generally, data mining is a very different and more specialist application than OLAP, and uses different tools from different vendors. Normally the users are different, too. OLAP vendors have had little success with their data mining efforts.
Ãâó: www.olapreport.com/glossary.htm
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| data mining |
A means of extracting previously unknown, actionable information from the growing base of accessible data in data warehouses using sophisticated, automated algorithms to discover hidden patterns, correlations and relationships.
Ãâó: www.iarchive.com/_library/terminology/d.htm
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| database |
A logical collection of interrelated information, managed and stored as a unit, usually on some form of mass-storage system such as magnetic tape or disk. A GIS database includes data about the spatial location and shape of geographic features recorded as points, lines, areas, pixels, grid cells, or tins, as well as their attributes.
Ãâó: www.mcaggis.com/glossary.htm
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