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Java Data Analysis

You're reading from   Java Data Analysis Data mining, big data analysis, NoSQL, and data visualization

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787285651
Length 412 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Author (1):
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John R. Hubbard John R. Hubbard
Author Profile Icon John R. Hubbard
John R. Hubbard
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Data Analysis 2. Data Preprocessing FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Visualization 4. Statistics 5. Relational Databases 6. Regression Analysis 7. Classification Analysis 8. Cluster Analysis 9. Recommender Systems 10. NoSQL Databases 11. Big Data Analysis with Java A. Java Tools Index

Matrix multiplication with MapReduce

If A is an m × p matrix and B is an p × n matrix, then the product of A and B is the m × n matrix C = AB, where the (i, j)th element of C is computed as the inner product of the ith row of A with the jth column of B:

Matrix multiplication with MapReduce

This is a dot product—simple arithmetic if m, p, and n are small. But not so simple if we're working with big data.

The formula for cij requires p multiplications and p – 1 additions, and there are m· n of these to do. So, that implementation runs in O(mnp) time. That is slow. Furthermore, if A and B are dense matrices (that is, most elements are nonzero), then storage requirements can also be overwhelming. This looks like a job for MapReduce.

For MapReduce, think key-value pairs. We assume that each matrix is stored as a sequence of key-value pairs, one for each non-zero element of the matrix. The key is the subscript pair (i, j), and the value is the (i, j)th element of the matrix. For example, this...

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