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Auto-FuzzyJoin: Auto-Program Fuzzy Similarity Joins Without Labeled Examples

Databases 2021-03-09 v1

Abstract

Fuzzy similarity join is an important database operator widely used in practice. So far the research community has focused exclusively on optimizing fuzzy join \textit{scalability}. However, practitioners today also struggle to optimize fuzzy-join \textit{quality}, because they face a daunting space of parameters (e.g., distance-functions, distance-thresholds, tokenization-options, etc.), and often have to resort to a manual trial-and-error approach to program these parameters in order to optimize fuzzy-join quality. This key challenge of automatically generating high-quality fuzzy-join programs has received surprisingly little attention thus far. In this work, we study the problem of "auto-program" fuzzy-joins. Leveraging a geometric interpretation of distance-functions, we develop an unsupervised \textsc{Auto-FuzzyJoin} framework that can infer suitable fuzzy-join programs on given input tables, without requiring explicit human input such as labeled training data. Using \textsc{Auto-FuzzyJoin}, users only need to provide two input tables LL and RR, and a desired precision target τ\tau (say 0.9). \textsc{Auto-FuzzyJoin} leverages the fact that one of the input is a reference table to automatically program fuzzy-joins that meet the precision target τ\tau in expectation, while maximizing fuzzy-join recall (defined as the number of correctly joined records). Experiments on both existing benchmarks and a new benchmark with 50 fuzzy-join tasks created from Wikipedia data suggest that the proposed \textsc{Auto-FuzzyJoin} significantly outperforms existing unsupervised approaches, and is surprisingly competitive even against supervised approaches (e.g., Magellan and DeepMatcher) when 50\% of ground-truth labels are used as training data.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2103.04489,
  title  = {Auto-FuzzyJoin: Auto-Program Fuzzy Similarity Joins Without Labeled Examples},
  author = {Peng Li and Xiang Cheng and Xu Chu and Yeye He and Surajit Chaudhuri},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.04489},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

full version of a paper in SIGMOD 2021

R2 v1 2026-06-23T23:51:34.412Z