Computes Friedman's H-statistic to assess the strength of variable interactions.
interact.gbm(x, data, i.var = 1, n.trees = x$n.trees)
Returns the value of \(H\).
A gbm.object
fitted using a call to gbm
.
The dataset used to construct x
. If the original dataset
is large, a random subsample may be used to accelerate the computation in
interact.gbm
.
A vector of indices or the names of the variables for compute
the interaction effect. If using indices, the variables are indexed in the
same order that they appear in the initial gbm
formula.
The number of trees used to generate the plot. Only the first
n.trees
trees will be used.
Greg Ridgeway gregridgeway@gmail.com
interact.gbm
computes Friedman's H-statistic to assess the relative
strength of interaction effects in non-linear models. H is on the scale of
[0-1] with higher values indicating larger interaction effects. To connect
to a more familiar measure, if \(x_1\) and \(x_2\) are uncorrelated
covariates with mean 0 and variance 1 and the model is of the form
$$y=\beta_0+\beta_1x_1+\beta_2x_2+\beta_3x_3$$ then
$$H=\frac{\beta_3}{\sqrt{\beta_1^2+\beta_2^2+\beta_3^2}}$$
Note that if the main effects are weak, the estimated H will be unstable. For example, if (in the case of a two-way interaction) neither main effect is in the selected model (relative influence is zero), the result will be 0/0. Also, with weak main effects, rounding errors can result in values of H > 1 which are not possible.
J.H. Friedman and B.E. Popescu (2005). “Predictive Learning via Rule Ensembles.” Section 8.1
gbm
, gbm.object