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Learning Data Mining with Python

You're reading from   Learning Data Mining with Python Harness the power of Python to analyze data and create insightful predictive models

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784396053
Length 344 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Robert Layton Robert Layton
Author Profile Icon Robert Layton
Robert Layton
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Data Mining FREE CHAPTER 2. Classifying with scikit-learn Estimators 3. Predicting Sports Winners with Decision Trees 4. Recommending Movies Using Affinity Analysis 5. Extracting Features with Transformers 6. Social Media Insight Using Naive Bayes 7. Discovering Accounts to Follow Using Graph Mining 8. Beating CAPTCHAs with Neural Networks 9. Authorship Attribution 10. Clustering News Articles 11. Classifying Objects in Images Using Deep Learning 12. Working with Big Data A. Next Steps… Index

Character n-grams


We saw how function words can be used as features to predict the author of a document. Another feature type is character n-grams. An n-gram is a sequence of n objects, where n is a value (for text, generally between 2 and 6). Word n-grams have been used in many studies, usually relating to the topic of the documents. However, character n-grams have proven to be of high quality for authorship attribution.

Character n-grams are found in text documents by representing the document as a sequence of characters. These n-grams are then extracted from this sequence and a model is trained. There are a number of different models for this, but a standard one is very similar to the bag-of-words model we have used earlier.

For each distinct n-gram in the training corpus, we create a feature for it. An example of an n-gram is <e t>, which is the letter e, a space, and then the letter t (the angle brackets are used to denote the start and end of the n-gram and aren't part of it)....

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