This python library implements the Minimum Jump Cost (MJC) dissimilarity measure devised by Joan Serra and Josep Lluis Arcos in 2012. The MJC dissimilarity measure was shown to outperform the Dynamic Time Warp (DTW) dissimilarity measure on several datasets. You can read their paper here: https://www.iiia.csic.es/sites/default/files/4584.pdf.
This library can compute the MJC for timeseries with different sampling rates, arbitrarily spaced data points, and non-overlapping regions.
pymjc
is available from PyPi. Run the following in a command line terminal:
pip install pymjc
Example:
from pymjc import mjc
import numpy as np
series_1 = np.array([1,2,3,2,1])
series_2 = np.array([0,1,2,1,0])
d_xy, abandoned = mjc(series_1, series_2, show_plot=True)
print(f"The MJC dissimilarity of series 1 and series 2 is {d_xy}")
There are some options for reducing the computational load of this algorithm. They are detailed in the next section.
The time series s1 and s2 are specified as follows:
- They may be python Lists or numpy.ndarrays
- They may be of different length.
- They may or may not have time information.
- If one of the time series has time information, the other must also have it.
- Their datatype may be floats or integers.
A time series with no time information is just a list of values. The first element of the list corresponds to
the earliest point in the time series.
Example: s1 = [d₀, d₁, d₂, ...]
, where dᵢ
is the i-th value of the time series.
A time series with time information must be a 2D array of shape (2, n). The data at index 0 are time
data, and the data at index 1 is amplitude data.
Example: s1 = [[t₀, t₁, t₂, ...], [d₀, d₁, d₂, ...]]
, where tᵢ
is the time of the i-th measurement. The time
values may be integers or floats, and need not begin at 0.
To visualize the algorithm, you may pass the variable show_plot=True
. This will generate a plot with the two time
series, and arrows signifying the jumps that the algorithm made when calculating the Minimum Jump Cost.
To stop the algorithm early, pass a value for dxy_limit
. If the dissimilarity measure exceeds this value during
computation, it is abandoned.
The time series are cast to numpy arrays. The checking and casting lowers execution speed. Therefore, an option to
disable this checking and casting has been implemented. If you are certain that the time series s1
and s2
are numpy.ndarray
s of the format [[time data],[amplitude data]]
, you may pass the variable override_checks=True
.
The algorithm locates the overlapping region between the two timeseries. This step is skipped if the first and last timestamps are equal between the two timeseries. If your data has no time data, it is skipped if there is the same number of samples in each timeseries.
As part of the calculation of the MJC, the algorithm calculates the standard deviations of the amplitude data, and
the average sampling periods of s1
and s2
. This lowers execution speed, but is required.
However, if you know the standard deviations and/or the average time difference between data points of either
(or both) s1
and s2
a-priori, you may pass these as variables. They are named std_s1
, std_s2
, tavg_s1
, and
tavg_s2
. Any number of these may be passed. The ones which are not passed will be calculated.
mjc() input parameters:
s1 : numpy ndarray | List. Time series 1.
s2 : numpy ndarray | List. Time series 2.
dxy_limit : Optional float. Early abandoning variable.
beta : Optional float. Time jump cost.
show_plot : Optional bool. If True, displays a plot that visualize the algorithms jump path. Default False.
std_s1 : Optional float. Standard deviation of time series s1.
std_s2 : Optional float. Standard deviation of time series s2.
tavg_s1 : Optional float. Average sampling period of time series 1.
tavg_s2 : Optional float. Average sampling period of time series 2.
return_args : Optional bool. If True, returns the values for std_s1, std_s2, tavg_s1, tavg_s2, s1, and s2.
override_checks : Optional bool. Override checking and casting