Book Image

The Data Science Workshop

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

The Data Science Workshop

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

Overview of this book

You already know you want to learn data science, and a smarter way to learn data science is to learn by doing. The Data Science Workshop focuses on building up your practical skills so that you can understand how to develop simple machine learning models in Python or even build an advanced model for detecting potential bank frauds with effective modern data science. You'll learn from real examples that lead to real results. Throughout The Data Science Workshop, you'll take an engaging step-by-step approach to understanding data science. You won't have to sit through any unnecessary theory. If you're short on time you can jump into a single exercise each day or spend an entire weekend training a model using sci-kit learn. It's your choice. Learning on your terms, you'll build up and reinforce key skills in a way that feels rewarding. Every physical print copy of The Data Science Workshop unlocks access to the interactive edition. With videos detailing all exercises and activities, you'll always have a guided solution. You can also benchmark yourself against assessments, track progress, and receive content updates. You'll even earn a secure credential that you can share and verify online upon completion. It's a premium learning experience that's included with your printed copy. To redeem, follow the instructions located at the start of your data science book. Fast-paced and direct, The Data Science Workshop is the ideal companion for data science beginners. You'll learn about machine learning algorithms like a data scientist, learning along the way. This process means that you'll find that your new skills stick, embedded as best practice. A solid foundation for the years ahead.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Introduction

In the previous chapter, you saw how to build a binary classifier using the famous Logistic Regression algorithm. A binary classifier can only take two different values for its response variables, such as 0 and 1 or yes and no. A multiclass classification task is just an extension. Its response variable can have more than two different values.

In the data science industry, quite often you will face multiclass classification problems. For example, if you were working for Netflix or any other streaming platform, you would have to build a model that could predict the user rating for a movie based on key attributes such as genre, duration, or cast. A potential list of rating values may be: Hate it, Dislike it, Neutral, Like it, Love it. The objective of the model would be to predict the right rating from those five possible values.

Multiclass classification doesn't always mean the response variable will be text. In some datasets, the target variable may be encoded...