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Hands-On Data Preprocessing in Python

You're reading from  Hands-On Data Preprocessing in Python

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801072137
Pages 602 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Roy Jafari Roy Jafari
Profile icon Roy Jafari

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1:Technical Needs
2. Chapter 1: Review of the Core Modules of NumPy and Pandas 3. Chapter 2: Review of Another Core Module – Matplotlib 4. Chapter 3: Data – What Is It Really? 5. Chapter 4: Databases 6. Part 2: Analytic Goals
7. Chapter 5: Data Visualization 8. Chapter 6: Prediction 9. Chapter 7: Classification 10. Chapter 8: Clustering Analysis 11. Part 3: The Preprocessing
12. Chapter 9: Data Cleaning Level I – Cleaning Up the Table 13. Chapter 10: Data Cleaning Level II – Unpacking, Restructuring, and Reformulating the Table 14. Chapter 11: Data Cleaning Level III – Missing Values, Outliers, and Errors 15. Chapter 12: Data Fusion and Data Integration 16. Chapter 13: Data Reduction 17. Chapter 14: Data Transformation and Massaging 18. Part 4: Case Studies
19. Chapter 15: Case Study 1 – Mental Health in Tech 20. Chapter 16: Case Study 2 – Predicting COVID-19 Hospitalizations 21. Chapter 17: Case Study 3: United States Counties Clustering Analysis 22. Chapter 18: Summary, Practice Case Studies, and Conclusions 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

KNN

KNN is one of the simplest classification algorithms, and almost everything you need to know about its mechanism is presented in its name. In simple terms, to classify a new data object, KNN finds the K-nearest neighbors to the new data object from the training dataset and uses the label of those data objects to assign the likely label of the new data object.

It might be the case that KNN is too simple, and because of that, you do not fully understand its mechanism. Let's continue our learning, using the following example.

Example of using KNN for classification

We are going to continue working on the loan application problem that was introduced earlier. After completing the classification design, we specified Income and Credit Score as independent attributes and Default? as the dependent attribute. The following screenshot shows a dataset that can support this classification design. The dataset is from the CustomerLoan.csv file:

Figure 7.2 ...

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