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recipes (version 0.1.7)

step_nzv: Near-Zero Variance Filter

Description

step_nzv creates a specification of a recipe step that will potentially remove variables that are highly sparse and unbalanced.

Usage

step_nzv(recipe, ..., role = NA, trained = FALSE, freq_cut = 95/5,
  unique_cut = 10, options = list(freq_cut = 95/5, unique_cut = 10),
  removals = NULL, skip = FALSE, id = rand_id("nzv"))

# S3 method for step_nzv tidy(x, ...)

Arguments

recipe

A recipe object. The step will be added to the sequence of operations for this recipe.

...

One or more selector functions to choose which variables that will evaluated by the filtering. See selections() for more details. For the tidy method, these are not currently used.

role

Not used by this step since no new variables are created.

trained

A logical to indicate if the quantities for preprocessing have been estimated.

freq_cut, unique_cut

Numeric parameters for the filtering process. See the Details section below.

options

A list of options for the filter (see Details below).

removals

A character string that contains the names of columns that should be removed. These values are not determined until prep.recipe() is called.

skip

A logical. Should the step be skipped when the recipe is baked by bake.recipe()? While all operations are baked when prep.recipe() is run, some operations may not be able to be conducted on new data (e.g. processing the outcome variable(s)). Care should be taken when using skip = TRUE as it may affect the computations for subsequent operations

id

A character string that is unique to this step to identify it.

x

A step_nzv object.

Value

An updated version of recipe with the new step added to the sequence of existing steps (if any). For the tidy method, a tibble with columns terms which is the columns that will be removed.

Details

This step diagnoses predictors that have one unique value (i.e. are zero variance predictors) or predictors that are have both of the following characteristics:

  1. they have very few unique values relative to the number of samples and

  2. the ratio of the frequency of the most common value to the frequency of the second most common value is large.

For example, an example of near zero variance predictor is one that, for 1000 samples, has two distinct values and 999 of them are a single value.

To be flagged, first the frequency of the most prevalent value over the second most frequent value (called the "frequency ratio") must be above freq_cut. Secondly, the "percent of unique values," the number of unique values divided by the total number of samples (times 100), must also be below unique_cut.

In the above example, the frequency ratio is 999 and the unique value percentage is 0.0001.

See Also

step_corr() recipe() prep.recipe() bake.recipe()

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
data(biomass)

biomass$sparse <- c(1, rep(0, nrow(biomass) - 1))

biomass_tr <- biomass[biomass$dataset == "Training",]
biomass_te <- biomass[biomass$dataset == "Testing",]

rec <- recipe(HHV ~ carbon + hydrogen + oxygen +
                    nitrogen + sulfur + sparse,
              data = biomass_tr)

nzv_filter <- rec %>%
  step_nzv(all_predictors())

filter_obj <- prep(nzv_filter, training = biomass_tr)

filtered_te <- bake(filter_obj, biomass_te)
any(names(filtered_te) == "sparse")

tidy(nzv_filter, number = 1)
tidy(filter_obj, number = 1)
# }

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