{ "id": "2007.15634", "version": "v1", "published": "2020-07-30T17:55:11.000Z", "updated": "2020-07-30T17:55:11.000Z", "title": "On the Nature and Types of Anomalies: A Review", "authors": [ "Ralph Foorthuis" ], "comment": "37 pages (29 pages content), 10 figures, 3 tables. Preprint; review comments will be appreciated", "categories": [ "cs.DB", "cs.AI", "cs.LG", "stat.OT" ], "abstract": "Anomalies are occurrences in a dataset that are in some way unusual and do not fit the general patterns. The concept of the anomaly is generally ill-defined and perceived as vague and domain-dependent. Moreover, no comprehensive and concrete overviews of the different types of anomalies have hitherto been published. By means of an extensive literature review this study therefore offers the first theoretically principled and domain-independent typology of data anomalies, and presents a full overview of anomaly types and subtypes. To concretely define the concept of the anomaly and its different manifestations the typology employs four dimensions: data type, cardinality of relationship, data structure and data distribution. These fundamental and data-centric dimensions naturally yield 3 broad groups, 9 basic types and 61 subtypes of anomalies. The typology facilitates the evaluation of the functional capabilities of anomaly detection algorithms, contributes to explainable data science, and provides insights into relevant topics such as local versus global anomalies.", "revisions": [ { "version": "v1", "updated": "2020-07-30T17:55:11.000Z" } ], "analyses": { "subjects": [ "62A01", "G.3", "I.2.6", "I.5" ], "keywords": [ "anomaly detection algorithms", "functional capabilities", "general patterns", "typology facilitates", "global anomalies" ], "note": { "typesetting": "TeX", "pages": 37, "language": "en", "license": "arXiv", "status": "editable" } } }