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The Data Science Workshop

You're reading from   The Data Science Workshop Learn how you can build machine learning models and create your own real-world data science projects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566927
Length 824 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (5):
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Robert Thas John Robert Thas John
Author Profile Icon Robert Thas John
Robert Thas John
Thomas Joseph Thomas Joseph
Author Profile Icon Thomas Joseph
Thomas Joseph
Anthony So Anthony So
Author Profile Icon Anthony So
Anthony So
Dr. Samuel Asare Dr. Samuel Asare
Author Profile Icon Dr. Samuel Asare
Dr. Samuel Asare
Andrew Worsley Andrew Worsley
Author Profile Icon Andrew Worsley
Andrew Worsley
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Introduction to Data Science in Python 2. Regression FREE CHAPTER 3. Binary Classification 4. Multiclass Classification with RandomForest 5. Performing Your First Cluster Analysis 6. How to Assess Performance 7. The Generalization of Machine Learning Models 8. Hyperparameter Tuning 9. Interpreting a Machine Learning Model 10. Analyzing a Dataset 11. Data Preparation 12. Feature Engineering 13. Imbalanced Datasets 14. Dimensionality Reduction 15. Ensemble Learning

Partial Dependence Plots

Another tool that is model-agnostic is a partial dependence plot. It is a visual tool for analyzing the effect of a feature on the target variable. To achieve this, we can plot the values of the feature we are interested in analyzing on the x-axis and the target variable on the y-axis and then show all the observations from the dataset on this graph. Let's try it on the Breast Cancer dataset from sklearn:

from sklearn.datasets import load_breast_cancer
import pandas as pd
data = load_breast_cancer()
df = pd.DataFrame(data.data, columns=data.feature_names)
df['target'] = data.target

Now that we have loaded the data and converted it to a DataFrame, let's have a look at the worst concave points column:

import altair as alt
alt.Chart(df).mark_circle(size=60)\
             .encode(x='worst concave points', y='target')

The resulting plot is as follows...

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