Multivariate Bernoulli classification
The previous example uses the Gaussian distribution for features that are essentially binary, {UP=1, DOWN=0}, to represent the change in value. The mean value is computed as the ratio of the number of observations for which xi = UP over the total number of observations.
As stated in the first section, the Gaussian distribution is more appropriate for either continuous features or binary features for very large labeled datasets. The example is the perfect candidate for the Bernoulli model.
Model
The Bernoulli model differs from Naïve Bayes classifier in that it penalizes the features x, which do not have any observations; the Naïve Bayes classifier ignores them [5:10].
Note
The Bernoulli mixture model
For a feature function fi, with fi = 1 if the feature is observed, and a value of 0 if the feature is not observed:
Implementation
The implementation of the Bernoulli model consists of modifying the Likelihood.score
scoring function by using the Bernoulli...