Book Image

Java: Data Science Made Easy

By : Richard M. Reese, Jennifer L. Reese, Alexey Grigorev
Book Image

Java: Data Science Made Easy

By: Richard M. Reese, Jennifer L. Reese, Alexey Grigorev

Overview of this book

Data science is concerned with extracting knowledge and insights from a wide variety of data sources to analyse patterns or predict future behaviour. It draws from a wide array of disciplines including statistics, computer science, mathematics, machine learning, and data mining. In this course, we cover the basic as well as advanced data science concepts and how they are implemented using the popular Java tools and libraries.The course starts with an introduction of data science, followed by the basic data science tasks of data collection, data cleaning, data analysis, and data visualization. This is followed by a discussion of statistical techniques and more advanced topics including machine learning, neural networks, and deep learning. You will examine the major categories of data analysis including text, visual, and audio data, followed by a discussion of resources that support parallel implementation. Throughout this course, the chapters will illustrate a challenging data science problem, and then go on to present a comprehensive, Java-based solution to tackle that problem. You will cover a wide range of topics – from classification and regression, to dimensionality reduction and clustering, deep learning and working with Big Data. Finally, you will see the different ways to deploy the model and evaluate it in production settings. By the end of this course, you will be up and running with various facets of data science using Java, in no time at all. This course contains premium content from two of our recently published popular titles: - Java for Data Science - Mastering Java for Data Science
Table of Contents (29 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Module 1
15
Module 2
26
Bibliography

Summary


In this chapter, we introduced a number of NLP tasks and showed how they are supported. In particular, we used OpenNLP and DL4J to illustrate how they are performed. While there are a number of other libraries available, these examples provide a good introduction to the techniques.

We started with an introduction to basic NLP terms and concepts such as named entity recognition, POS, and relationships between elements of a sentence. Named entity recognition is concerned with finding and labeling the parts of a sentence such as people, locations, and things. POS associates labels with elements of a sentence. For example, NN refers to a noun and VB to a verb.

 

We then included a discussion of the Word2Vec and Doc2Vec neural networks. These were used to classify text, both with labels and by similarity with other words. We demonstrated the use of DL4J resources to create feature vectors for document association with labels.

While the identification of these associations is interesting,...