Book Image

Python Feature Engineering Cookbook

By : Soledad Galli
Book Image

Python Feature Engineering Cookbook

By: Soledad Galli

Overview of this book

Feature engineering is invaluable for developing and enriching your machine learning models. In this cookbook, you will work with the best tools to streamline your feature engineering pipelines and techniques and simplify and improve the quality of your code. Using Python libraries such as pandas, scikit-learn, Featuretools, and Feature-engine, you’ll learn how to work with both continuous and discrete datasets and be able to transform features from unstructured datasets. You will develop the skills necessary to select the best features as well as the most suitable extraction techniques. This book will cover Python recipes that will help you automate feature engineering to simplify complex processes. You’ll also get to grips with different feature engineering strategies, such as the box-cox transform, power transform, and log transform across machine learning, reinforcement learning, and natural language processing (NLP) domains. By the end of this book, you’ll have discovered tips and practical solutions to all of your feature engineering problems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Performing multivariate imputation by chained equations

Multivariate imputation methods, as opposed to univariate imputation, use the entire set of variables to estimate the missing values. In other words, the missing values of a variable are modeled based on the other variables in the dataset. Multivariate imputation by chained equations (MICE) is a multiple imputation technique that models each variable with missing values as a function of the remaining variables and uses that estimate for imputation. MICE has the following basic steps:

  1. A simple univariate imputation is performed for every variable with missing data, for example, median imputation.
  2. One specific variable is selected, say, var_1, and the missing values are set back to missing.
  3. A model that's used to predict var_1 is built based on the remaining variables in the dataset.
  4. The missing values...