par Carcillo, Fabrizio ;Le Borgne, Yann-Aël ;Caelen, Olivier ;Bontempi, Gianluca
Référence International journal of data science and analytics (Print), 5, 4, page (285-300)
Publication Publié, 2018-06
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Credit card fraud detection is a very challenging problem because of the specific nature of transaction data and the labeling process. The transaction data are peculiar because they are obtained in a streaming fashion, and they are strongly imbalanced and prone to non-stationarity. The labeling is the outcome of an active learning process, as every day human investigators contact only a small number of cardholders (associated with the riskiest transactions) and obtain the class (fraud or genuine) of the related transactions. An adequate selection of the set of cardholders is therefore crucial for an efficient fraud detection process. In this paper, we present a number of active learning strategies and we investigate their fraud detection accuracies. We compare different criteria (supervised, semi-supervised and unsupervised) to query unlabeled transactions. Finally, we highlight the existence of an exploitation/exploration trade-off for active learning in the context of fraud detection, which has so far been overlooked in the literature.