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Forecasting Time Series Data with Facebook Prophet

You're reading from   Forecasting Time Series Data with Facebook Prophet Build, improve, and optimize time series forecasting models using the advanced forecasting tool

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800568532
Length 270 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Greg Rafferty Greg Rafferty
Author Profile Icon Greg Rafferty
Greg Rafferty
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started
2. Chapter 1: The History and Development of Time Series Forecasting FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started with Facebook Prophet 4. Section 2: Seasonality, Tuning, and Advanced Features
5. Chapter 3: Non-Daily Data 6. Chapter 4: Seasonality 7. Chapter 5: Holidays 8. Chapter 6: Growth Modes 9. Chapter 7: Trend Changepoints 10. Chapter 8: Additional Regressors 11. Chapter 9: Outliers and Special Events 12. Chapter 10: Uncertainty Intervals 13. Section 3: Diagnostics and Evaluation
14. Chapter 11: Cross-Validation 15. Chapter 12: Performance Metrics 16. Chapter 13: Productionalizing Prophet 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Detecting outliers automatically

In these examples so far, we detected outliers with a simple visual inspection of the data and applied common sense. In a fully automated setting, defining logical rules for what we as humans do intuitively can be difficult. Outlier detection is a good use of an analyst's time as we humans are able to use much more intuition, domain knowledge, and experience than a computer can. But as Prophet was developed to reduce the workload of analysts and automate as much as possible, we'll examine a couple of techniques to identify outliers automatically.

Winsorizing

The first technique is called Winsorization, named after the statistician Charles P. Winsor. It is also sometimes called clipping. Winsorization is a blunt tool and tends not to work well with non-flat trends. Winsorization requires the analyst to specify a percentile; all data above or below that percentile is forced to the value at the percentile.

Trimming is a similar technique...

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