Measuring the Class-imbalance Extent of Multi-class Problems
Abstract
Since many important real-world classification problems involve learning from unbalanced data, the challenging class-imbalance problem has lately received con- siderable attention in the community. Most of the methodological contributions proposed in the literature carry out a set of experiments over a battery of specific datasets. In these cases, in order to be able to draw meaningful conclusions from the experiments, authors often measure the class-imbalance extent of each tested dataset using imbalance-ratio, i.e. dividing the frequencies of the majority class by the minority class.
In this paper, we argue that, although imbalance-ratio is an informative measure for binary problems, it is not adequate for the multi-class scenario due to the fact that, in that scenario, it groups problems with disparate class-imbalance extents under the same numerical value. Thus, in order to overcome this drawback, in this paper, we propose imbalance-degree as a novel and normalised measure which is capable of properly measuring the class-imbalance extent of a multi-class problem. Experimental results show that imbalance-degree is more adequate than imbalance- ratio since it is more sensitive in reflecting the hindrance produced by skewed multi- class distributions to the learning processes.