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Machine Learning for Imbalanced Data

You're reading from  Machine Learning for Imbalanced Data

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801070836
Pages 344 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Kumar Abhishek Kumar Abhishek
Profile icon Kumar Abhishek
Dr. Mounir Abdelaziz Dr. Mounir Abdelaziz
Profile icon Dr. Mounir Abdelaziz
View More author details

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introduction to Data Imbalance in Machine Learning 2. Chapter 2: Oversampling Methods 3. Chapter 3: Undersampling Methods 4. Chapter 4: Ensemble Methods 5. Chapter 5: Cost-Sensitive Learning 6. Chapter 6: Data Imbalance in Deep Learning 7. Chapter 7: Data-Level Deep Learning Methods 8. Chapter 8: Algorithm-Level Deep Learning Techniques 9. Chapter 9: Hybrid Deep Learning Methods 10. Chapter 10: Model Calibration 11. Assessments 12. Index 13. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Machine Learning Pipeline in Production

What is oversampling?

Sampling involves selecting a subset of observations from a larger set of observations. In this chapter, we’ll initially focus on binary classification problems with two classes: the positive class and the negative class. The minority class has significantly fewer instances than the majority class. Later in this chapter, we will explore multi-class classification problems. Toward the end of this chapter, we will look into oversampling for multi-class classification problems.

Oversampling is a data balancing technique that generates more samples of the minority class. However, this can be easily scaled to work for any number of classes where there are multiple classes with an imbalance. Figure 2.1 shows how samples of minority and majority classes are imbalanced (a) initially and balanced (b) after applying an oversampling technique:

Figure 2.1 – An increase in the number of minority class samples after oversampling

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