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The Data Science Workshop

You're reading from   The Data Science Workshop A New, Interactive Approach to Learning Data Science

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838981266
Length 818 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (5):
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Thomas Joseph Thomas Joseph
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Thomas Joseph
Andrew Worsley Andrew Worsley
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Andrew Worsley
Robert Thas John Robert Thas John
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Robert Thas John
Anthony So Anthony So
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Anthony So
Dr. Samuel Asare Dr. Samuel Asare
Author Profile Icon Dr. Samuel Asare
Dr. Samuel Asare
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Data Science in Python 2. Regression FREE CHAPTER 3. Binary Classification 4. Multiclass Classification with RandomForest 5. Performing Your First Cluster Analysis 6. How to Assess Performance 7. The Generalization of Machine Learning Models 8. Hyperparameter Tuning 9. Interpreting a Machine Learning Model 10. Analyzing a Dataset 11. Data Preparation 12. Feature Engineering 13. Imbalanced Datasets 14. Dimensionality Reduction 15. Ensemble Learning 16. Machine Learning Pipelines 17. Automated Feature Engineering

Performing Data Aggregation

Alright. We are getting close to the end of this chapter. But before we wrap it up, there is one more technique to explore for creating new features: data aggregation. The idea behind it is to summarize a numerical column for specific groups from another column. We already saw an example of how to aggregate two numerical variables from the ATO dataset (Average net tax and Average total deductions) for each cluster found by k-means using the .pivot_table() method in Chapter 5, Performing Your First Cluster Analysis. But at that time, we aggregated the data not to create new features but to understand the difference between these clusters.

You may wonder to yourself in which cases you would want to perform feature engineering using data aggregation. If you already have a numerical column that contains a value for each record, why would you need to summarize it and add this information back to the DataFrame? It feels like we are just adding the same information...

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