Book Image

The Data Science Workshop - Second Edition

By : Anthony So, Thomas V. Joseph, Robert Thas John, Andrew Worsley, Dr. Samuel Asare
5 (1)
Book Image

The Data Science Workshop - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Anthony So, Thomas V. Joseph, Robert Thas John, Andrew Worsley, Dr. Samuel Asare

Overview of this book

Where there’s data, there’s insight. With so much data being generated, there is immense scope to extract meaningful information that’ll boost business productivity and profitability. By learning to convert raw data into game-changing insights, you’ll open new career paths and opportunities. The Data Science Workshop begins by introducing different types of projects and showing you how to incorporate machine learning algorithms in them. You’ll learn to select a relevant metric and even assess the performance of your model. To tune the hyperparameters of an algorithm and improve its accuracy, you’ll get hands-on with approaches such as grid search and random search. Next, you’ll learn dimensionality reduction techniques to easily handle many variables at once, before exploring how to use model ensembling techniques and create new features to enhance model performance. In a bid to help you automatically create new features that improve your model, the book demonstrates how to use the automated feature engineering tool. You’ll also understand how to use the orchestration and scheduling workflow to deploy machine learning models in batch. By the end of this book, you’ll have the skills to start working on data science projects confidently. By the end of this book, you’ll have the skills to start working on data science projects confidently.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Preface
12
12. Feature Engineering

Evaluating the Model's Performance

Now that we know how to train a Random Forest classifier, it is time to check whether we did a good job or not. What we want is to get a model that makes extremely accurate predictions, so we need to assess its performance using some kind of metric.

For a classification problem, multiple metrics can be used to assess the model's predictive power, such as F1 score, precision, recall, or ROC AUC. Each of them has its own specificity and depending on the projects and datasets, you may use one or another.

In this chapter, we will use a metric called accuracy score. It calculates the ratio between the number of correct predictions and the total number of predictions made by the model:

Figure 4.5: Formula for accuracy score

For instance, if your model made 950 correct predictions out of 1,000 cases, then the accuracy score would be 950/1000 = 0.95. This would mean that your model was 95% accurate on that dataset...