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Data Analysis with R, Second Edition - Second Edition

You're reading from  Data Analysis with R, Second Edition - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788393720
Pages 570 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Toc

Table of Contents (24) Chapters close

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
1. RefresheR 2. The Shape of Data 3. Describing Relationships 4. Probability 5. Using Data To Reason About The World 6. Testing Hypotheses 7. Bayesian Methods 8. The Bootstrap 9. Predicting Continuous Variables 10. Predicting Categorical Variables 11. Predicting Changes with Time 12. Sources of Data 13. Dealing with Missing Data 14. Dealing with Messy Data 15. Dealing with Large Data 16. Working with Popular R Packages 17. Reproducibility and Best Practices 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Random forests


The final classifier that we will be discussing in this chapter is the aptly named Random Forest and is an example of a meta-technique called ensemble learning. The idea and logic behind random forests follows.

Given that (unpruned) decision trees can be nearly bias-less high variance classifiers, a method of reducing variance at the cost of a marginal increase of bias could greatly improve upon the predictive accuracy of the technique. One salient approach to reducing the variance of decision trees is to train a bunch of unpruned decision trees on different random subsets of the training data, sampling with replacement—this is called bootstrap aggregating or bagging. At the classification phase, the test observation is run through all of these trees (a forest, perhaps?), and each resulting classification casts a vote for the final classification of the whole forest. The class with the highest number of votes is the winner. It turns out that the consensus among many high-variance...

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