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R Data Mining

You're reading from  R Data Mining

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787124462
Pages 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters close

Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Why to Choose R for Your Data Mining and Where to Start 2. A First Primer on Data Mining Analysing Your Bank Account Data 3. The Data Mining Process - CRISP-DM Methodology 4. Keeping the House Clean – The Data Mining Architecture 5. How to Address a Data Mining Problem – Data Cleaning and Validation 6. Looking into Your Data Eyes – Exploratory Data Analysis 7. Our First Guess – a Linear Regression 8. A Gentle Introduction to Model Performance Evaluation 9. Don't Give up – Power up Your Regression Including Multiple Variables 10. A Different Outlook to Problems with Classification Models 11. The Final Clash – Random Forests and Ensemble Learning 12. Looking for the Culprit – Text Data Mining with R 13. Sharing Your Stories with Your Stakeholders through R Markdown 14. Epilogue
15. Dealing with Dates, Relative Paths and Functions

Defining model performance


OK then, let's ask a question to start talking about performance: when you estimate a model, how do you say if it is a good model? As you have probably already heard, the American statistician George Box used to say:

All models are wrong, but some are useful.

This is, besides a nice quote, also a great truth: there is no perfect model, all models are some kind of an abstraction from reality, like maps are an abstraction from the real Earth. Nevertheless, if those maps are accurate enough, they are invaluable friends in the hands of travelers. This could seem to you nothing more than a suggestive analogy, but it's actually a useful way to intend models since it captures two of their most relevant aspects:

  • Models need to have a good level of abstraction from the real phenomenon they are trying to model
  • Models have to be accurate enough to be useful

I don't need to say to you that the main topics here are to define what a good level of abstractionis and define what it...

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