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Deep Learning for Time Series Cookbook

You're reading from   Deep Learning for Time Series Cookbook Use PyTorch and Python recipes for forecasting, classification, and anomaly detection

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805129233
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Luís Roque Luís Roque
Author Profile Icon Luís Roque
Luís Roque
Vitor Cerqueira Vitor Cerqueira
Author Profile Icon Vitor Cerqueira
Vitor Cerqueira
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Time Series 2. Chapter 2: Getting Started with PyTorch FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Univariate Time Series Forecasting 4. Chapter 4: Forecasting with PyTorch Lightning 5. Chapter 5: Global Forecasting Models 6. Chapter 6: Advanced Deep Learning Architectures for Time Series Forecasting 7. Chapter 7: Probabilistic Time Series Forecasting 8. Chapter 8: Deep Learning for Time Series Classification 9. Chapter 9: Deep Learning for Time Series Anomaly Detection 10. Index 11. Other Books You May Enjoy

Handling trend – taking first differences

In Chapter 1, we learned about different time series patterns such as trend or seasonality. This recipe describes the process of dealing with trend in time series before training a deep neural network.

Getting ready

As we learned in Chapter 1, trend is the long-term change in the time series. When the average value of the time series changes, this means that the data is not stationary. Non-stationary time series are more difficult to model, so it’s important to transform the data into a stationary series.

Trend is usually removed from the time series by taking the first differences until the data becomes stationary.

First, let’s start by splitting the time series into training and testing sets:

from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
train, test = train_test_split(series, test_size=0.2, shuffle=False)

We leave the last 20% of observations for testing.

How to do it…

There are two...

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