Book Image

Mastering Spark for Data Science

By : Andrew Morgan, Antoine Amend, Matthew Hallett, David George
Book Image

Mastering Spark for Data Science

By: Andrew Morgan, Antoine Amend, Matthew Hallett, David George

Overview of this book

Data science seeks to transform the world using data, and this is typically achieved through disrupting and changing real processes in real industries. In order to operate at this level you need to build data science solutions of substance –solutions that solve real problems. Spark has emerged as the big data platform of choice for data scientists due to its speed, scalability, and easy-to-use APIs. This book deep dives into using Spark to deliver production-grade data science solutions. This process is demonstrated by exploring the construction of a sophisticated global news analysis service that uses Spark to generate continuous geopolitical and current affairs insights.You will learn all about the core Spark APIs and take a comprehensive tour of advanced libraries, including Spark SQL, Spark Streaming, MLlib, and more. You will be introduced to advanced techniques and methods that will help you to construct commercial-grade data products. Focusing on a sequence of tutorials that deliver a working news intelligence service, you will learn about advanced Spark architectures, how to work with geographic data in Spark, and how to tune Spark algorithms so they scale linearly.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Mastering Spark for Data Science
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Building a recommender


Now that we've explored our song analyzer, let's get back on track with the recommendation engine. As discussed earlier, we would like to recommend songs based on frequency hashes extracted from audio signals. Taking as an example the dispute between Led Zeppelin and Spirit, we would expect both songs to be relatively close to each other, as the allegation is that they share a melody. Using this thought as our main assumption, we could potentially recommend Taurus to someone interested in Stairway to Heaven.

The PageRank algorithm

Instead of recommending a specific song, we will recommend playlists. A playlist would consist of a list of all our songs ranked by relevance, most to least relevant. Let's begin with the assumption that people listen to music in a similar way to the way they browse articles on the web, that is, following a logical path from link to link, but occasionally switching direction, or teleporting, and browsing to a totally different website. Continuing...