Book Image

Advanced Machine Learning with R

By : Cory Lesmeister, Dr. Sunil Kumar Chinnamgari
Book Image

Advanced Machine Learning with R

By: Cory Lesmeister, Dr. Sunil Kumar Chinnamgari

Overview of this book

R is one of the most popular languages when it comes to exploring the mathematical side of machine learning and easily performing computational statistics. This Learning Path shows you how to leverage the R ecosystem to build efficient machine learning applications that carry out intelligent tasks within your organization. You’ll work through realistic projects such as building powerful machine learning models with ensembles to predict employee attrition. Next, you’ll explore different clustering techniques to segment customers using wholesale data and even apply TensorFlow and Keras-R for performing advanced computations. Each chapter will help you implement advanced machine learning algorithms using real-world examples. You’ll also be introduced to reinforcement learning along with its use cases and models. Finally, this Learning Path will provide you with a glimpse into how some of these black box models can be diagnosed and understood. By the end of this Learning Path, you’ll be equipped with the skills you need to deploy machine learning techniques in your own projects.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, the goal was to discuss how important the element of time is in the field of machine learning and analytics, to identify the common traps when analyzing the time series, and to demonstrate the techniques and methods to work around these traps. We explored both the univariate and bivariate time series analysis for global temperature anomalies and human carbon dioxide emissions. Additionally, we looked at Granger causality to determine whether we can say, statistically speaking, that atmospheric CO2 levels cause surface temperature anomalies. We discovered that the p-values are higher than 0.05 but less than 0.10 for Granger causality from CO2 to temperature. It does show that Granger causality is an effective tool in investigating causality in machine learning problems. In the next chapter, we'll shift gears and take a look at how to apply learning methods to textual data.

Additionally, keep in mind that in time series analysis, we just skimmed the surface. I encourage...