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Machine Learning with R

You're reading from   Machine Learning with R Learn techniques for building and improving machine learning models, from data preparation to model tuning, evaluation, and working with big data

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801071321
Length 762 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Brett Lantz Brett Lantz
Author Profile Icon Brett Lantz
Brett Lantz
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Machine Learning 2. Managing and Understanding Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Lazy Learning – Classification Using Nearest Neighbors 4. Probabilistic Learning – Classification Using Naive Bayes 5. Divide and Conquer – Classification Using Decision Trees and Rules 6. Forecasting Numeric Data – Regression Methods 7. Black-Box Methods – Neural Networks and Support Vector Machines 8. Finding Patterns – Market Basket Analysis Using Association Rules 9. Finding Groups of Data – Clustering with k-means 10. Evaluating Model Performance 11. Being Successful with Machine Learning 12. Advanced Data Preparation 13. Challenging Data – Too Much, Too Little, Too Complex 14. Building Better Learners 15. Making Use of Big Data 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

The challenge of high-dimension data

If someone says that they are struggling to handle the size of a dataset, it is easy to assume that they are talking about having too many rows or that the data uses too much memory or storage space. Indeed, these are common issues that cause problems for new machine learning practitioners. In this scenario, the solutions tend to be technical rather than methodological; one generally chooses a more efficient algorithm or uses hardware or a cloud computing platform capable of consuming large datasets. In the worst case, one can take a random sampling and simply discard some of the excessive rows.

The challenge of having too much data can also apply to a dataset’s columns, making the dataset overly wide rather than overly long. It may require some creative thinking to imagine why this happens, or why it is a problem, because it is rarely encountered in the tidy confines of teaching examples. Even in real-world practice, it may be quite...

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