Book Image

Machine Learning with R Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Yu-Wei, Chiu (David Chiu)
Book Image

Machine Learning with R Cookbook, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Yu-Wei, Chiu (David Chiu)

Overview of this book

Big data has become a popular buzzword across many industries. An increasing number of people have been exposed to the term and are looking at how to leverage big data in their own businesses, to improve sales and profitability. However, collecting, aggregating, and visualizing data is just one part of the equation. Being able to extract useful information from data is another task, and a much more challenging one. Machine Learning with R Cookbook, Second Edition uses a practical approach to teach you how to perform machine learning with R. Each chapter is divided into several simple recipes. Through the step-by-step instructions provided in each recipe, you will be able to construct a predictive model by using a variety of machine learning packages. In this book, you will first learn to set up the R environment and use simple R commands to explore data. The next topic covers how to perform statistical analysis with machine learning analysis and assess created models, covered in detail later on in the book. You'll also learn how to integrate R and Hadoop to create a big data analysis platform. The detailed illustrations provide all the information required to start applying machine learning to individual projects. With Machine Learning with R Cookbook, machine learning has never been easier.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Introduction


Classification is used to identify a category of new observations (testing datasets) based on a classification model built from the training dataset of which the categories are already known. Similar to regression, classification is categorized as a supervised learning method as it employs known answers (label) of a training dataset to predict the answer (label) of the testing dataset. The main difference between regression and classification is that regression is used to predict continuous values.

In contrast to this, classification is used to identify the category of a given observation. For example, one may use regression to predict the future price of a given stock based on historical prices. However, one should use the classification method to predict whether the stock price will rise or fall.

In this chapter, we will illustrate how to use R to perform classification. We first build a training dataset and a testing dataset from the churn dataset, and then apply different...