Book Image

Mastering Predictive Analytics with R - Second Edition

By : James D. Miller, Rui Miguel Forte
Book Image

Mastering Predictive Analytics with R - Second Edition

By: James D. Miller, Rui Miguel Forte

Overview of this book

R offers a free and open source environment that is perfect for both learning and deploying predictive modeling solutions. With its constantly growing community and plethora of packages, R offers the functionality to deal with a truly vast array of problems. The book begins with a dedicated chapter on the language of models and the predictive modeling process. You will understand the learning curve and the process of tidying data. Each subsequent chapter tackles a particular type of model, such as neural networks, and focuses on the three important questions of how the model works, how to use R to train it, and how to measure and assess its performance using real-world datasets. How do you train models that can handle really large datasets? This book will also show you just that. Finally, you will tackle the really important topic of deep learning by implementing applications on word embedding and recurrent neural networks. By the end of this book, you will have explored and tested the most popular modeling techniques in use on real- world datasets and mastered a diverse range of techniques in predictive analytics using R.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Mastering Predictive Analytics with R Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
8
Dimensionality Reduction
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we explored the process of building and evaluating recommender systems in R using the recommenderlab package. We focused primarily on the paradigm of collaborative filtering, which in a nutshell formalizes the idea of recommending items to users through word-of-mouth. As a general rule, we found that user-based collaborative filtering performs quite quickly but requires all the data to make predictions. Item-based collaborative filtering can be slow to train a model but makes predictions very quickly once the model is trained. It is useful in practice because it does not require us to store all the data. In some scenarios, the trade-off in accuracy between these two can be high, but in others the difference is acceptable.

The process of training recommendation systems is quite resource-intensive and a number of important parameters come into play in the design, such as the metrics used to quantify similarity and distance between items and users. Finally, we touched...