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Data Transformation in ML

Stanford_dsc01161
(Stanford University - Alvin Wei-Cheng Wong)

 

- Overview

Data transformation includes dimensionality reduction, feature selection, and creation of new features. These steps help reduce data noise and improve the ML model's ability to make accurate predictions. 

Data transformation is a critical step in the data analysis and machine learning (ML) pipeline because it can significantly impact the performance and interpretability of models. The choice of transformation techniques depends on the nature of the data and the specific goals of the analysis or modelling task. 

Data transformation refers to converting and optimizing data for various purposes, such as analytics, reporting, or storage. It involves cleaning, structuring, and enriching data to ensure accuracy and relevance. 

Data transformation solutions often utilize advanced technologies like AI and ML to streamline and automate these processes. The goal is to make data more accessible, understandable, and actionable, empowering organizations to make informed decisions and drive innovation.

 

- Reasons for Data Transformation

The purpose of data transformation is to improve the quality and usefulness of data by removing noise and inconsistencies. It involves activities such as: Joining tables and various datasets to perform analysis. Removing duplicate columns, rows with missing or null values.

Some reasons for data transformation include:

  • Improving quality: Data can be standardized, errors can be eliminated, and missing values can be filled in to make data more accurate and reliable.
  • Protecting data: Data masking can help protect against data loss, compromised accounts, and insecure connections. It can also allow authorized users to share data without exposing private information.
  • Simplifying data: Data transformation techniques can simplify complex datasets and make them easier to analyze. For example, aggregation can summarize data to reduce its size and complexity, while discretization can group raw data into categories to make it more manageable. Generalization can simplify low-level data sets into higher-level categories that are easier to understand.

Other data transformation techniques include:

  • Filtering: Limits the scope of data and allows for conditional processing
  • Lookup: Retrieves data from a reference table or dataset based on a specified condition or key
  • Rank: Returns the largest or smallest numeric value in a port or group, or the strings at the top or bottom of a session sort order 

 

- Data Transformation Techniques

Data transformation involves a range of techniques designed to make a dataset more suitable for analysis and other applications, such as training ML models.

There are numerous methods available for effective data transformation, each catering to different project requirements and dataset characteristics. Data transformation involves a series of steps that can vary depending on the specific needs and goals of a project.

Here are a few key steps that are typically followed:

  • Data Cleaning: Eliminating errors, inconsistencies, and missing values to ensure high-quality, reliable data.
  • Standardization: Scaling numerical data to have a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1 for compatibility with certain algorithms.
  • Encoding Categorical Data: Converting categorical variables into numerical formats for algorithmic processing.
  • Aggregation: Summarizing data by calculating averages, sums, or counts within specific categories or timeframes.
  • Feature Engineering: Creating new data attributes from existing ones to capture additional insights or relationships.
  • Data Reduction: Reducing data dimensionality by selecting relevant features or using techniques like PCA (Principal component analysis).
  • Time Series Decomposition: Breaking down time series data into trend, seasonality, and noise components for separate analysis.
  • Binning or Discretization: Grouping continuous data into discrete categories, helpful for managing noisy data.
  • Smoothing: Applying methods like moving averages to reduce noise in time series or create smoothed data.
  • Logarithmic or Exponential Transformation: Altering data distribution through logarithmic or exponential functions for specialized analyses.
  • Text Preprocessing: Preparing text data for NLP (Natural language processing) tasks by tokenizing, stemming, or lemmatizing.

 


[More to come ...]

 

 

 
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