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R Programming By Example

You're reading from   R Programming By Example Practical, hands-on projects to help you get started with R

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788292542
Length 470 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Omar Trejo Navarro Omar Trejo Navarro
Author Profile Icon Omar Trejo Navarro
Omar Trejo Navarro
Omar Trejo Navarro Omar Trejo Navarro
Author Profile Icon Omar Trejo Navarro
Omar Trejo Navarro
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to R 2. Understanding Votes with Descriptive Statistics FREE CHAPTER 3. Predicting Votes with Linear Models 4. Simulating Sales Data and Working with Databases 5. Communicating Sales with Visualizations 6. Understanding Reviews with Text Analysis 7. Developing Automatic Presentations 8. Object-Oriented System to Track Cryptocurrencies 9. Implementing an Efficient Simple Moving Average 10. Adding Interactivity with Dashboards 11. Required Packages

Testing our predictive model with unseen data

Now that we have our final model, we need to validate its results by testing it with unseen data. This will give us the confidence that our model is well trained and will probably produce similar results where new data is handed to use.

A careful reader should have noticed that we used the TF-IDF data frame when creating our sentiment analysis data, and not any of the ones we create later with combinations of bigrams, SVDs, and cosine similarities, which operate in a different semantic space due to the fact they are transformations of the original DFM. Therefore, before we can actually use our trained model to make predictions on the test data, we need to transform it into an equivalent space as our training data. Otherwise, we would be comparing apples and oranges, which would give us nonsense results.

To make sure that we're...

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