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Mastering Data analysis with R

You're reading from   Mastering Data analysis with R Gain sharp insights into your data and solve real-world data science problems with R—from data munging to modeling and visualization

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783982028
Length 396 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Gergely Daróczi Gergely Daróczi
Author Profile Icon Gergely Daróczi
Gergely Daróczi
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello, Data! 2. Getting Data from the Web FREE CHAPTER 3. Filtering and Summarizing Data 4. Restructuring Data 5. Building Models (authored by Renata Nemeth and Gergely Toth) 6. Beyond the Linear Trend Line (authored by Renata Nemeth and Gergely Toth) 7. Unstructured Data 8. Polishing Data 9. From Big to Small Data 10. Classification and Clustering 11. Social Network Analysis of the R Ecosystem 12. Analyzing Time-series 13. Data Around Us 14. Analyzing the R Community A. References Index

The segmentation of documents


To identify the different groups of cleaned terms, based on the frequency and association of the terms in the documents of the corpus, one might directly use our tdm matrix to run, for example, the classic hierarchical cluster algorithm.

On the other hand, if you would rather like to cluster the R packages based on their description, we should compute a new matrix with DocumentTermMatrix, instead of the previously used TermDocumentMatrix. Then, calling the clustering algorithm on this matrix would result in the segmentation of the packages.

For more details on the available methods, algorithms, and guidance on choosing the appropriate functions for clustering, please see Chapter 10, Classification and Clustering. For now, we will fall back to the traditional hclust function, which provides a built-in way of running hierarchical clustering on distance matrices. For a quick demo, let's demonstrate this on the so-called Hadleyverse, which describes a useful collection...

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