Book Image

R Data Mining

Book Image

R Data Mining

Overview of this book

R is widely used to leverage data mining techniques across many different industries, including finance, medicine, scientific research, and more. This book will empower you to produce and present impressive analyses from data, by selecting and implementing the appropriate data mining techniques in R. It will let you gain these powerful skills while immersing in a one of a kind data mining crime case, where you will be requested to help resolving a real fraud case affecting a commercial company, by the mean of both basic and advanced data mining techniques. While moving along the plot of the story you will effectively learn and practice on real data the various R packages commonly employed for this kind of tasks. You will also get the chance of apply some of the most popular and effective data mining models and algos, from the basic multiple linear regression to the most advanced Support Vector Machines. Unlike other data mining learning instruments, this book will effectively expose you the theory behind these models, their relevant assumptions and when they can be applied to the data you are facing. By the end of the book you will hold a new and powerful toolbox of instruments, exactly knowing when and how to employ each of them to solve your data mining problems and get the most out of your data. Finally, to let you maximize the exposure to the concepts described and the learning process, the book comes packed with a reproducible bundle of commented R scripts and a practical set of data mining models cheat sheets.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
14
Epilogue

Defining a data modelling strategy


I was perhaps too hasty proposing this solution to Mr Clough—he is a great professional, but I have never heard of one of his requests going unsatisfied. Moreover, his words made me think is not excluding the hypothesis of fraud. And this makes me even more nervous, if that's possible.

Nevertheless, we have to do this as if it is business as usual. The point is that we need some kind of data related to default events in the past and the companies that experimented this status. What? They also gave you a dataset about past default events? And you already cleaned it? That is what I call good news. OK, just send it to me and we can start to work on it immediately.

clean_casted_stored_data_validated_complete, uh? You don't fear long names, do you? Just run glimpse on it and see what is inside:

glimpse(clean_casted_stored_data_validated_complete)

Observations: 11,523
 Variables: 16
 $ attr_3 <dbl> 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0,...