Book Image

The Handbook of NLP with Gensim

By : Chris Kuo
Book Image

The Handbook of NLP with Gensim

By: Chris Kuo

Overview of this book

Navigating the terrain of NLP research and applying it practically can be a formidable task made easy with The Handbook of NLP with Gensim. This book demystifies NLP and equips you with hands-on strategies spanning healthcare, e-commerce, finance, and more to enable you to leverage Gensim in real-world scenarios. You’ll begin by exploring motives and techniques for extracting text information like bag-of-words, TF-IDF, and word embeddings. This book will then guide you on topic modeling using methods such as Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) for dimensionality reduction and discovering latent semantic relationships in text data, Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) for probabilistic topic modeling, and Ensemble LDA to enhance topic modeling stability and accuracy. Next, you’ll learn text summarization techniques with Word2Vec and Doc2Vec to build the modeling pipeline and optimize models using hyperparameters. As you get acquainted with practical applications in various industries, this book will inspire you to design innovative projects. Alongside topic modeling, you’ll also explore named entity handling and NER tools, modeling procedures, and tools for effective topic modeling applications. By the end of this book, you’ll have mastered the techniques essential to create applications with Gensim and integrate NLP into your business processes.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: NLP Basics
5
Part 2: Latent Semantic Analysis/Latent Semantic Indexing
9
Part 3: Word2Vec and Doc2Vec
12
Part 4: Topic Modeling with Latent Dirichlet Allocation
18
Part 5: Comparison and Applications

The basics of discrete probability distributions

Let’s start with the fundamentals. What is a random variable? A random variable is a set of possible outcomes from a random experiment. For example, if we want to know whether tomorrow’s weather is sunny or rainy, then “tomorrow’s weather” is the random variable, and the possible outcomes are “sunny” and “rainy.” A random variable can be discrete or continuous. If a random variable takes only a finite number of distinct values such as “sunny” or “rainy,” it is a discrete random variable. If a random variable can have a continuum of infinite and uncountable outcomes, it is a continuous random variable. Then, a discrete probability distribution is a distribution that shows all possible discrete values with respective probabilities for each value. When we say tomorrow is 70% sunny and 30% rainy, we are saying the random x variable has two outcomes...