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Practical Machine Learning with R

You're reading from   Practical Machine Learning with R Define, build, and evaluate machine learning models for real-world applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838550134
Length 416 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Brindha Priyadarshini Jeyaraman Brindha Priyadarshini Jeyaraman
Author Profile Icon Brindha Priyadarshini Jeyaraman
Brindha Priyadarshini Jeyaraman
Ludvig Renbo Olsen Ludvig Renbo Olsen
Author Profile Icon Ludvig Renbo Olsen
Ludvig Renbo Olsen
Monicah Wambugu Monicah Wambugu
Author Profile Icon Monicah Wambugu
Monicah Wambugu
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Toc

Table of Contents (8) Chapters Close

About the Book 1. An Introduction to Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Cleaning and Pre-processing 3. Feature Engineering 4. Introduction to neuralnet and Evaluation Methods 5. Linear and Logistic Regression Models 6. Unsupervised Learning 1. Appendix

Introduction

While neural networks are often better than linear and logistic regression models at solving regression and classification tasks, respectively, they can be very difficult to interpret. If we wish to test the hypothesis that people drink more water when the temperature rises, it's important that we can extract this information from our model. A neural network with many layers might be very good at predicting the water consumption of a person, based on features such as age, gender, weight, height, humidity, and temperature, but it would be difficult to say how temperature alone affects the prediction. Linear regression would tell us specifically how temperature contributed to the prediction. So, while we might get a worse prediction, we gain an insight into the data and, potentially, the real world. Logistic regression, which we use for binary classification, is similarly easier to interpret.

In this chapter, we will implement and interpret linear and logistic regression models...

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