Divisi is a tool to find interpretable patterns in large datasets that can be expressed as tabular features (for example, transactions, survey responses, electronic health records, or text documents). It runs faster than existing rule-based subgroup discovery algorithms and has an interactive interface to help you probe and curate subgroups of interest. Check out the paper (CHI 2025) to learn more.
Optionally create a virtual environment with Python >3.7. Install the package:
pip install divisi-toolkitInstall Jupyter Notebook or Jupyter Lab if not already installed. Then start a
Jupyter server. The example_data/demo.ipynb notebook shows how to start
the interactive widget or use the subgroup discovery algorithm programmatically.
To run Divisi, you first need to create a preprocessed, discretized version of
your dataset. The easiest way is to take a Pandas dataframe and run the
discretize_data command:
import divisi
discrete_df = divisi.discretize_data(
df,
custom_cols={
# Specify custom discretization strategies here
'Age': divisi.bin_values(quantiles=5),
# ...
},
remove_cols=[
# Specify columns to remove from subgroup discovery
'Label'
# ...
])If you have a text dataset, you can also use the discretize_token_sets method.
(TODO provide example of text encoding)
Then, to use the Divisi interface in a notebook, simply create a DivisiWidget
instance:
w = divisi.DivisiWidget(
discrete_df,
# provide a path to store interface state so you can pick up where you left off
state_path="divisi_state",
# metrics to display for each subgroup (must be numpy arrays)
metrics={
"Label": y,
"Error": is_error
})
wBy default, ranking functions will be created based on the metrics you provide.
You can also provide ranking functions using the ranking_functions keyword
argument to the DivisiWidget constructor. The following ranking functions are
available in divisi.ranking:
OutcomeRate(y: ndarray, inverse: bool = false): Prioritizes subgroups with a higher rate of the given binary outcomeywithin the subgroup. IfinverseisTrue, prioritizes subgroups with a lower rate.OutcomeShare(y: ndarray): Prioritizes subgroups that capture more of the positive instances of the binary outcomey. Helps to measure coverage of the subgroup.InteractionEffect(y: ndarray): Prioritizes subgroups for which all rule features contribute highly to the rate of the given binary outcome.MeanDifference(y: ndarray): Prioritizes subgroups which have a mean of the given continuous metricysubstantially different from the average.Entropy(y: ndarray, inverse: bool = false): Prioritizes subgroups with a lower (or, ifinverseisTrue, higher) entropy for the given integer-valued metricyinside the subgroup than outside.SubgroupSize(ideal_fraction: number, spread: number): Scores subgroups by their size according to a Gaussian curve with a mean ofideal_fractionand a standard deviation ofspread.SimpleRule(): Prioritizes subgroups defined by rules with fewer features.
To generate subgroups using pure Python without the interface, initialize an
instance of SamplingSubgroupSearch with the discretized data object, ranking
functions, and any search parameters, then run the sampler:
finder = divisi.sampling.SamplingSubgroupSearch(
discrete_df,
{
"High True Labels": divisi.ranking.OutcomeRate(y),
"High Errors": divisi.ranking.OutcomeRate(is_error),
"Simple Rule": divisi.ranking.SimpleRule()
},
# additional sampling options
min_items_fraction=0.05
# ...
)
results, _ = finder.sample(50)After running the sampler, you can re-rank the results based on the provided ranking functions without rerunning the search:
for rule in results.rank({"High True Labels": 1.0, "Simple Rule": 0.25}):
# rule.feature gets the predicate, rule.score_values contains the scores for each ranking function
print(rule)
# make a boolean mask over the dataframe corresponding to the rule
mask = discrete_df.mask_for_rule(rule)Please use the following citation if using Divisi in your projects:
@inproceedings{sivaraman2025divisi,
title = {{Divisi: Interactive Search and Visualization for Scalable Exploratory Subgroup Analysis}},
author = {Sivaraman, Venkatesh and Li, Zexuan and Perer, Adam},
year = {2025},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
doi = {10.1145/3706598.3713103},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems},
numpages = {17},
location = {Yokohama, Japan},
series = {CHI '25}
}If you have a cool use case for Divisi, tell us about it!
To develop the frontend, make sure you have an up-to-date version of NodeJS in your terminal, then run:
cd client
npm install
viteThe vite command starts a live hot-reload server for the frontend. Then, when
you initialize the DivisiWidget, pass the dev=True keyword argument to
use the live server. (Make sure that you don't have anything else running on
port 5173 while you do this.)