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Machine Learning with R

Machine Learning with R

By : Brett Lantz
4.2 (46)
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Machine Learning with R

Machine Learning with R

4.2 (46)
By: Brett Lantz

Overview of this book

Machine learning, at its core, is concerned with transforming data into actionable knowledge. R offers a powerful set of machine learning methods to quickly and easily gain insight from your data. Machine Learning with R, Third Edition provides a hands-on, readable guide to applying machine learning to real-world problems. Whether you are an experienced R user or new to the language, Brett Lantz teaches you everything you need to uncover key insights, make new predictions, and visualize your findings. This new 3rd edition updates the classic R data science book to R 3.6 with newer and better libraries, advice on ethical and bias issues in machine learning, and an introduction to deep learning. Find powerful new insights in your data; discover machine learning with R.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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Index

Summary

In this chapter, we learned about classification using k-NN. Unlike many classification algorithms, k-nearest neighbors does not do any learning. It simply stores the training data verbatim. Unlabeled test examples are then matched to the most similar records in the training set using a distance function, and the unlabeled example is assigned the label of its neighbors.

In spite of the fact that k-NN is a very simple algorithm, it is capable of tackling extremely complex tasks such as the identification of cancerous masses. In a few simple lines of R code, we were able to correctly identify whether a mass was malignant or benign 98 percent of the time.

In the next chapter, we will examine a classification method that uses probability to estimate the likelihood that an observation falls into certain categories. It will be interesting to compare how this approach differs from k-NN. Later on, in Chapter 9, Finding Groups of Data – Clustering with k-means, we will learn about a...

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