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The Natural Language Processing Workshop

You're reading from   The Natural Language Processing Workshop Confidently design and build your own NLP projects with this easy-to-understand practical guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800208421
Length 452 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (6):
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Sohom Ghosh Sohom Ghosh
Author Profile Icon Sohom Ghosh
Sohom Ghosh
Nipun Sadvilkar Nipun Sadvilkar
Author Profile Icon Nipun Sadvilkar
Nipun Sadvilkar
Rohan Chopra Rohan Chopra
Author Profile Icon Rohan Chopra
Rohan Chopra
Muzaffar Bashir Shah Muzaffar Bashir Shah
Author Profile Icon Muzaffar Bashir Shah
Muzaffar Bashir Shah
Dwight Gunning Dwight Gunning
Author Profile Icon Dwight Gunning
Dwight Gunning
Aniruddha M. Godbole Aniruddha M. Godbole
Author Profile Icon Aniruddha M. Godbole
Aniruddha M. Godbole
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Introduction to Natural Language Processing 2. Feature Extraction Methods FREE CHAPTER 3. Developing a Text Classifier 4. Collecting Text Data with Web Scraping and APIs 5. Topic Modeling 6. Vector Representation 7. Text Generation and Summarization 8. Sentiment Analysis Appendix

What Is a Vector?

The basic mathematical definition of a vector is an object that has both magnitude and direction. In our definition, it is mostly compared with a scalar, which can be defined as an object that has only magnitude. Vectors are also defined as an element in vector space—for example, a point in space with the coordinates (x=4, y=5, z=6) is a vector. Here, we can see the vector dimensions are the geometric coordinates of a point or element in space. However, the vector dimensions can also represent any quantity or property of some element or object in addition to mere geometric coordinates.

As an example, let's say that we're defining the weather at a given place using five features: temperature, humidity, precipitation, wind speed, and air pressure. The units that these would be measured in are Celsius, percentage, centimeters, kilometers per hour (km/h), and millibar (mbar), respectively. The following are the values for two places:

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