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Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition

Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition

By : James D. Miller , Rui Miguel Forte
5 (1)
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Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition

Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition

5 (1)
By: James D. Miller , Rui Miguel Forte

Overview of this book

R offers a free and open source environment that is perfect for both learning and deploying predictive modeling solutions. With its constantly growing community and plethora of packages, R offers the functionality to deal with a truly vast array of problems. The book begins with a dedicated chapter on the language of models and the predictive modeling process. You will understand the learning curve and the process of tidying data. Each subsequent chapter tackles a particular type of model, such as neural networks, and focuses on the three important questions of how the model works, how to use R to train it, and how to measure and assess its performance using real-world datasets. How do you train models that can handle really large datasets? This book will also show you just that. Finally, you will tackle the really important topic of deep learning by implementing applications on word embedding and recurrent neural networks. By the end of this book, you will have explored and tested the most popular modeling techniques in use on real- world datasets and mastered a diverse range of techniques in predictive analytics using R.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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8
8. Dimensionality Reduction
15
Index

Predicting recommendations for movies and jokes

In this chapter, we will focus on building recommender systems using two different datasets. To do this, we shall use the recommenderlab package. This provides us with not only the algorithms to perform the recommendations, but also with the data structures to store the sparse rating matrices efficiently. The first datasets we will use contains anonymous user reviews for jokes from the Jester Online Joke recommender system.

The joke ratings fall on a continuous scale (-10 to +10). A number of datasets collected from the Jester system can be found at http://eigentaste.berkeley.edu/dataset/. We will use the datasets labeled on the website as Dataset 2+. This datasets contains ratings made by 50,692 users on 150 jokes. As is typical with a real-world application, the rating matrix is very sparse in that each user rated only a fraction of all the jokes; the minimum number of ratings made by a user is 8. We will refer to this data set as the jester...

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