Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Conferences
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Statistics for Machine Learning

You're reading from   Statistics for Machine Learning Techniques for exploring supervised, unsupervised, and reinforcement learning models with Python and R

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788295758
Length 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Arrow right icon
Author (1):
Arrow left icon
Pratap Dangeti Pratap Dangeti
Author Profile Icon Pratap Dangeti
Pratap Dangeti
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Journey from Statistics to Machine Learning 2. Parallelism of Statistics and Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 3. Logistic Regression Versus Random Forest 4. Tree-Based Machine Learning Models 5. K-Nearest Neighbors and Naive Bayes 6. Support Vector Machines and Neural Networks 7. Recommendation Engines 8. Unsupervised Learning 9. Reinforcement Learning

Random forest classifier


Random forests provide an improvement over bagging by doing a small tweak that utilizes de-correlated trees. In bagging, we build a number of decision trees on bootstrapped samples from training data, but the one big drawback with the bagging technique is that it selects all the variables. By doing so, in each decision tree, order of candidate/variable chosen to split remains more or less the same for all the individual trees, which look correlated with each other. Variance reduction on correlated individual entities does not work effectively while aggregating them.

In random forest, during bootstrapping (repeated sampling with replacement), samples were drawn from training data; not just simply the second and third observations randomly selected, similar to bagging, but it also selects the few predictors/columns out of all predictors (m predictors out of total p predictors).

The thumb rule for variable selection of m variables out of total variables p, is m = sqrt...

lock icon The rest of the chapter is locked
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime