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R Machine Learning By Example

You're reading from   R Machine Learning By Example Understand the fundamentals of machine learning with R and build your own dynamic algorithms to tackle complicated real-world problems successfully

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784390846
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Raghav Bali Raghav Bali
Author Profile Icon Raghav Bali
Raghav Bali
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with R and Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Let's Help Machines Learn 3. Predicting Customer Shopping Trends with Market Basket Analysis 4. Building a Product Recommendation System 5. Credit Risk Detection and Prediction – Descriptive Analytics 6. Credit Risk Detection and Prediction – Predictive Analytics 7. Social Media Analysis – Analyzing Twitter Data 8. Sentiment Analysis of Twitter Data Index

Data preprocessing


In the data preprocessing step, we will be focusing on two things mainly: data type transformations and data normalization. Finally we will split the data into training and testing datasets for predictive modeling. You can access the code for this section in the data_preparation.R file. We will be using some utility functions, which are mentioned in the following code snippet. Remember to load them up in memory by running them in the R console:

## data type transformations - factoring
to.factors <- function(df, variables){
  for (variable in variables){
    df[[variable]] <- as.factor(df[[variable]])
  }
  return(df)
}

## normalizing - scaling
scale.features <- function(df, variables){
  for (variable in variables){
    df[[variable]] <- scale(df[[variable]], center=T, scale=T)
  }
  return(df)
}

The preceding functions operate on the data frame to transform the data. For data type transformations, we mainly perform factoring of the categorical variables,...

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