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Data Cleaning and Exploration with Machine Learning

Data Cleaning and Exploration with Machine Learning

By : Michael Walker
4.3 (9)
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Data Cleaning and Exploration with Machine Learning

Data Cleaning and Exploration with Machine Learning

4.3 (9)
By: Michael Walker

Overview of this book

Many individuals who know how to run machine learning algorithms do not have a good sense of the statistical assumptions they make and how to match the properties of the data to the algorithm for the best results. As you start with this book, models are carefully chosen to help you grasp the underlying data, including in-feature importance and correlation, and the distribution of features and targets. The first two parts of the book introduce you to techniques for preparing data for ML algorithms, without being bashful about using some ML techniques for data cleaning, including anomaly detection and feature selection. The book then helps you apply that knowledge to a wide variety of ML tasks. You’ll gain an understanding of popular supervised and unsupervised algorithms, how to prepare data for them, and how to evaluate them. Next, you’ll build models and understand the relationships in your data, as well as perform cleaning and exploration tasks with that data. You’ll make quick progress in studying the distribution of variables, identifying anomalies, and examining bivariate relationships, as you focus more on the accuracy of predictions in this book. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to deal with complex data problems using unsupervised ML algorithms like principal component analysis and k-means clustering.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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1
Section 1 – Data Cleaning and Machine Learning Algorithms
5
Section 2 – Preprocessing, Feature Selection, and Sampling
9
Section 3 – Modeling Continuous Targets with Supervised Learning
13
Section 4 – Modeling Dichotomous and Multiclass Targets with Supervised Learning
19
Section 5 – Clustering and Dimensionality Reduction with Unsupervised Learning

Key concepts

Decision trees are an exceptionally useful machine learning tool. They are non-parametric, easy to interpret, and can work with a wide range of data. No assumptions regarding linearity of relationships between features and targets, and normality of error terms, are made. It isn’t even necessary to scale the data. Decision trees also often do a good job of capturing complex relationships between predictors and targets.

The flexibility of the decision tree algorithm, and its ability to model complicated and unanticipated relationships in the data, is due to the recursive partitioning procedure that’s used to segment the data. Decision trees group observations based on the values of their features. This is done with a series of binary decisions, starting from an initial split at the root node, and ending with a leaf for each grouping. Each split is based on the feature, and feature values, that provide the most information about the target. More precisely...

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