Time Series with Matrix Profile

Francisco Bischoff

2022-08-18

Recently I began to look further into Time Series(TS). During the course of my Master’s degree, I used the forecast package quite a bit (Thanks to Prof. Hyndman), and TS got my attention. So, after reading lots of publications about everything you can imagine about TS, I came across one publication from Prof. Eamonn, of the University of California, that made me contact him to ask a few questions. After receiving a huge amount of information from him, one particular subject caught my attention: Matrix Profile. I was so much impressed that I started to write the TSMP R Package.

Enough talking, so what is a Matrix Profile? Why should you care about it?

Matrix Profile

If you are here, you are likely aware of what a Distance Matrix (DM) is. If not, think about those tables that used to be on maps with the distance between cities. It is widely used in TS for clustering, classification, motif search etc. But, even for modestly sized datasets, the algorithms can take months to compute it and even with speed-up techniques (i.e., indexing, lower-bounding, early abandoning) they can be, at best, one or two orders of magnitude faster.

Matrix Profile it’s like a DM but faster (much faster) to compute. Figure 1 shows a DM and a Matrix Profile. As you can see, in the Matrix Profile, as the name suggests, you see the Profile of a DM. It stores the minimum Euclidean distance of every subset of one TS (think of a Sliding Window) with another (or itself, called Self-Join). It also stores a companion vector called Profile Index, that gives us the index of each nearest neighbor.

Figure 1: Distance Matrix and its Matrix Profile.

Figure 1: Distance Matrix and its Matrix Profile.

And is this good?

Why should you care?

DM usually stores redundant information, useless for most TS applications. The Matrix Profile has a host of interesting and exploitable properties. For example, the highest point on the Matrix Profile corresponds to the TS discord, the (tied) lowest points correspond to the locations of the best TS motif pair, and the variance can be seen as a measure of the TS complexity. Moreover, the histogram of the values in the Matrix Profile is the exact answer to the TS density estimation. Particularly, it has implications for TS motif discovery, TS joins, shapelet discovery (classification), density estimation, semantic segmentation, visualization, rule discovery, clustering etc.1

This method has the following advantages/features:

Performance on an Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-7700 CPU @ 3.60GHz using a random walk dataset

set.seed(2018)
data <- cumsum(sample(c(-1, 1), 40000, TRUE))
Elapsed Time3 Data size Window size Threads
scrimp() 45.30s 40000 1000 1
stomp_par() 52.72s 40000 1000 8
stomp() 136.01s 40000 1000 1
stamp_par() 140.25s 40000 1000 8
stamp() 262.03s 40000 1000 1

Further readings

All information you need to get started with Matrix Profiles is available at the UCR Matrix Profile webpage. Papers, Slides, examples, are available there.

Once become more familiar with this concept, you can start reading the TSMP R Package documentation.


  1. For pure similarity search, it is suggested you see MASS for Euclidean Distance, and the UCR Suite for DTW↩︎

  2. All Pairs Similarity Search↩︎

  3. These are results using only R code, no low-level C code optimizations↩︎