http://www.grassroots-oracle.com/2017/06/removing-outliers-using-stddev.html
I want to follow this up with a practical case using one of my favourite data sets - the apex_workspace_activity_logs that record who opened what page, in what context, and how long it took to generate.
I've been keeping an eye on the performance of a particular page, after making a few performance adjustments to some conditions. Unfortunately, we had an unrelated anomaly that pushed average pages times quite high for a short period. Needless to say, this set of outliers transformed my beautiful performance indicating lines to a boxy bell curve.
Oracle APEX page performance data with extreme outlier |
A great feature with Oracle JET is the ability to hide certain series, on click within the legend.
In this case I just wanted to ignore the MAX line for this post, which in this chart forms the secondary y-axis.
OracleJET Region Attributes - rescale |
This graph shows results where I modified the query to filter the outliers, on demand.
Performance graph with outlier removed |
Looks like the adjustments to the conditions worked! The trend is downwards.
I tried a few variations to control the switch, but this seemed to perform the most predictably, although I'm not happy with the hardcoded number.
select [aggregate stuff] from ( select [all columns] ,case when :P23_IGNORE_OUTLIERS = 'Y' then -- only bother calculating when filtering them out stddev(elapsed_time) over (order by null) else 9999999 end as the_stddev from [activity logs] where [time/page is desired] ) -- only when elapsed time less than 2 standard deviations gets 95% of your data where (elapsed_time < 2*the_stddev )I have a generic example of this on livesql.oracle.com I pay attention to these aggregates for our performance reports
- Median - what most users are experiencing
- Average - a typical user experience, influenced by extremes
- Moving average - general trend of visits, spread over a few days. An attempt to normalise local events
- Max - what's the worst some people are experiencing?
Happy graphing!
2 comments:
Great Post, very helpful and I would never have the nerves to find this out by myself :-)
Thanks Juergen. Eliminating outliers in this data is something that's been bugging me for a while, and I've played with stddev once or twice before.
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