We live in a ‘data driven society’ where
BigData, today’s hot-topic, manifests itself in many industrial domains, such
as healthcare, public safety, finance and other commercial areas. BigData is commonly addressed in terms of 4 V’s: Volume,
Variety, Velocity and Veracity. Volume and Variety imply organisations to have
a firm grip on information management,
Velocity motivates for fast, optimized algorithms and Veracity focuses
on governance, compliance, context and information-value. It is here where the
discipline of Advanced Analytics
plays a crucial role. But what actually is Advanced Analytics?
In general, analytics refers to the discipline that encompasses all processes and techniques to extract information and models from data. In the IT industry Analytics is understood as the process or method of logical analysis leading to the discovery and communication of meaningful patterns in data using statistics, computer programming and operations research to quantify and optimize performance.
The discipline Advanced Analytics, includes advanced
techniques and methodologies such as data-modelling, machine learning, and data
mining in order to detect patterns or finding relationships in the data. Typical techniques include clustering, decision tree building, text analysis,
context mining, trend analysis, and predictive modeling. Interesting aspects
are to find ways where prior
information known by humans can be combined with data sources in such a way that it optimizes the learning processes and deduction of statistical or semantic
patterns.
The discipline of Advanced
Analytics will become a commonality within 2-5 years. In the meantime, while
the heat of the BigData hype will settle down to normal temperatures, we might start
to think about the next thing: "what would be the role and influence of
individual humans in a connected, data driven and perhaps predictable world?"
Wico Mulder
4-3-2014
Wico Mulder
4-3-2014
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