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Python Data Analysis

You're reading from   Python Data Analysis Learn how to apply powerful data analysis techniques with popular open source Python modules

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783553358
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ivan Idris Ivan Idris
Author Profile Icon Ivan Idris
Ivan Idris
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Python Libraries FREE CHAPTER 2. NumPy Arrays 3. Statistics and Linear Algebra 4. pandas Primer 5. Retrieving, Processing, and Storing Data 6. Data Visualization 7. Signal Processing and Time Series 8. Working with Databases 9. Analyzing Textual Data and Social Media 10. Predictive Analytics and Machine Learning 11. Environments Outside the Python Ecosystem and Cloud Computing 12. Performance Tuning, Profiling, and Concurrency A. Key Concepts
B. Useful Functions C. Online Resources
Index

Autocorrelation


Autocorrelation is correlation within a dataset and can indicate a trend.

Note

For a given time series, with known mean and standard deviations, we can define the autocorrelation for times s and t using the expected value operator as follows:

This is, in essence, the formula for correlation applied to a time series and the same time series lagged.

For example, if we have a lag of one period, we can check if the previous value influences the current value. For that to be true, the autocorrelation value has to be pretty high.

In the previous chapter, Chapter 6, Data Visualization, we already used a pandas function that plots autocorrelation. In this example, we will use the NumPy correlate() function to calculate the actual autocorrelation values for the sunspots cycle. At the end, we need to normalize the values we receive. Apply the NumPy correlate() function as follows:

y = data - np.mean(data)
norm = np.sum(y ** 2)
correlated = np.correlate(y, y, mode='full')/norm

We are also...

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