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Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition

You're reading from   Mastering Predictive Analytics with R, Second Edition Machine learning techniques for advanced models

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787121393
Length 448 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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James D. Miller James D. Miller
Author Profile Icon James D. Miller
James D. Miller
Rui Miguel Forte Rui Miguel Forte
Author Profile Icon Rui Miguel Forte
Rui Miguel Forte
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Gearing Up for Predictive Modeling FREE CHAPTER 2. Tidying Data and Measuring Performance 3. Linear Regression 4. Generalized Linear Models 5. Neural Networks 6. Support Vector Machines 7. Tree-Based Methods 8. Dimensionality Reduction 9. Ensemble Methods 10. Probabilistic Graphical Models 11. Topic Modeling 12. Recommendation Systems 13. Scaling Up 14. Deep Learning Index

Predicting glass type revisited


In Chapter 3, Linear Regression, we analyzed the glass identification dataset, whose task is to identify the type of glass comprising a glass fragment found at a crime scene. The output of this dataset is a factor with several class levels corresponding to different types of glass. Our previous approach was to build a one-versus-all model using multinomial logistic regression. The results were not very promising, and one of the main points of concern was a poor model fit on the training data.

In this section, we will revisit this dataset and see whether a neural network model can do better. At the same time, we will demonstrate how neural networks can handle classification problems as well:

> glass <- read.csv("glass.data", header = FALSE)
> names(glass) <- c("id", "RI", "Na", "Mg", "Al", "Si", "K", "Ca", 
"Ba", "Fe", "Type")
> glass$id <- NULL

Our output is a multiclass factor and so we will want to dummy-encode this into binary columns. With...

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