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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

Pipelines

As experiments grow, so does the complexity of the operations. We may split up our dataset, binarize features, perform feature-based scaling, perform sample-based scaling, and many more operations.

Keeping track of all of these operations can get quite confusing and can result in being unable to replicate the result. Problems include forgetting a step, incorrectly applying a transformation, or adding a transformation that wasn't needed.

Another issue is the order of the code. In the previous section, we created our X_transformed dataset and then created a new estimator for the cross validation. If we had multiple steps, we would need to track all of these changes to the dataset in the code.

Pipelines are a construct that addresses these problems (and others, which we will see in the next chapter). Pipelines store the steps in your data mining workflow. They can take your raw data in, perform all the necessary transformations, and then create a prediction. This allows us to use...

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