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Machine Learning with R

You're reading from   Machine Learning with R R gives you access to the cutting-edge software you need to prepare data for machine learning. No previous knowledge required ‚Äì this book will take you methodically through every stage of applying machine learning.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782162148
Length 396 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Brett Lantz Brett Lantz
Author Profile Icon Brett Lantz
Brett Lantz
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Machine Learning with R
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Introducing Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing and Understanding Data 3. Lazy Learning – Classification Using Nearest Neighbors 4. Probabilistic Learning – Classification Using Naive Bayes 5. Divide and Conquer – Classification Using Decision Trees and Rules 6. Forecasting Numeric Data – Regression Methods 7. Black Box Methods – Neural Networks and Support Vector Machines 8. Finding Patterns – Market Basket Analysis Using Association Rules 9. Finding Groups of Data – Clustering with k-means 10. Evaluating Model Performance 11. Improving Model Performance 12. Specialized Machine Learning Topics Index

Factors


If you recall from Chapter 1, Introducing Machine Learning, features that represent a characteristic with categories of values are known as nominal. Although it is possible to use a character vector to store nominal data, R provides a data structure known as a factor specifically for this purpose. A factor is a special case of vector that is solely used for representing nominal variables. In the medical dataset we are building, we might use a factor to represent gender, because it uses two categories: MALE and FEMALE.

Why not use character vectors? An advantage of using factors is that they are generally more efficient than character vectors because the category labels are stored only once. Rather than storing MALE, MALE, FEMALE, the computer may store 1, 1, 2. This can save memory. Additionally, certain machine learning algorithms use special routines to handle categorical variables. Coding categorical variables as factors ensures that the model will treat this data appropriately...

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