The Hopkins statistic (introduced by Brian Hopkins and John Gordon Skellam) is a way of measuring the cluster tendency of a data set.[1] It belongs to the family of sparse sampling tests. It acts as a statistical hypothesis test where the null hypothesis is that the data is generated by a Poisson point process and are thus uniformly randomly distributed.[2] If individuals are aggregated, then its value approaches 0, and if they are randomly distributed, the value tends to 0.5.[3]

Preliminaries

A typical formulation of the Hopkins statistic follows.[2]

Let be the set of data points.
Generate a random sample of data points sampled without replacement from .
Generate a set of uniformly randomly distributed data points.
Define two distance measures,
the minimum distance (given some suitable metric) of to its nearest neighbour in , and
the minimum distance of to its nearest neighbour

Definition

With the above notation, if the data is dimensional, then the Hopkins statistic is defined as:[4]

Under the null hypotheses, this statistic has a Beta(m,m) distribution.

Notes and references

  1. Hopkins, Brian; Skellam, John Gordon (1954). "A new method for determining the type of distribution of plant individuals". Annals of Botany. Annals Botany Co. 18 (2): 213–227. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a083391.
  2. 1 2 Banerjee, A. (2004). "Validating clusters using the Hopkins statistic". 2004 IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37542). Vol. 1. pp. 149–153. doi:10.1109/FUZZY.2004.1375706. ISBN 0-7803-8353-2. S2CID 36701919.
  3. Aggarwal, Charu C. (2015). Data Mining. Cham: Springer International Publishing. p. 158. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-14142-8. ISBN 978-3-319-14141-1. S2CID 13595565.
  4. Cross, G.R.; Jain, A.K. (1982). "Measurement of clustering tendency". Theory and Application of Digital Control: 315-320. doi:10.1016/B978-0-08-027618-2.50054-1.
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