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Book STEP BY STEP PROJECT BASED TUTORIALS DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI  TRAFFIC AND HEART ATTACK ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION

Download or read book STEP BY STEP PROJECT BASED TUTORIALS DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI TRAFFIC AND HEART ATTACK ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2023-06-21 with total page 179 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this book, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In chapter 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries to perform how to predict traffic (number of vehicles) in four different junctions using Traffic Prediction Dataset (https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/06/step-by-step-project-based-tutorials.html). This dataset contains 48.1k (48120) observations of the number of vehicles each hour in four different junctions: 1) DateTime; 2) Juction; 3) Vehicles; and 4) ID. Here's the outline of the steps involved in predicting traffic: Dataset Preparation: Extract the dataset files to a local folder. Import the necessary libraries, such as pandas and numpy. Load the dataset into a pandas DataFrame. Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA). Explore the dataset to understand its structure and characteristics. Check for missing values or anomalies in the data. Examine the distribution of the target variable (number of vehicles). Visualize the data using plots or graphs to gain insights into the patterns and trends.; Data Preprocessing: Convert the DateTime column to a datetime data type for easier manipulation. Extract additional features from the DateTime column, such as hour, day of the week, month, etc., which might be relevant for traffic prediction. Encode categorical variables, such as Junction, using one-hot encoding or label encoding. Split the dataset into training and testing sets for model evaluation.; Feature Selection/Engineering: Perform feature selection techniques, such as correlation analysis or feature importance, to identify the most relevant features for traffic prediction. Engineer new features that might capture underlying patterns or relationships in the data, such as lagged variables or rolling averages.; Model Selection and Training: Choose an appropriate machine learning model for traffic prediction, such as linear regression, decision trees, random forests, or gradient boosting. Split the data into input features (X) and target variable (y). Split the data further into training and testing sets. Fit the chosen model to the training data. Evaluate the model's performance using appropriate evaluation metrics (e.g., mean squared error, R-squared). Model Evaluation and Hyperparameter Tuning. Assess the model's performance on the testing set. Tune the hyperparameters of the chosen model to improve its performance. Use techniques like grid search or randomized search to find the optimal hyperparameters.; Model Deployment and Prediction: Once satisfied with the model's performance, retrain it on the entire dataset (including the testing set). Save the trained model for future use. Utilize the model to make predictions on new, unseen data for traffic prediction. In chapter 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict heart attack using Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset (https://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/06/step-by-step-project-based-tutorials.html). Following are the outline steps for analyzing and predicting heart attacks using the Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset. Introduction and Dataset Description: Provide an introduction to the topic of heart attack analysis and prediction. Briefly explain the dataset's source and its features, such as age, sex, blood pressure, cholesterol levels, etc.; Data Loading: Explain how to load the Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset into your Python environment using libraries like Pandas. You can mention that the dataset should be in a CSV format and demonstrate how to load it.; Data Exploration: Describe the importance of exploring the dataset before analysis. Show how to examine the dataset's structure, check for missing values, understand the statistical summary, and visualize the data using plots or charts.; Data Preprocessing: Explain the steps required to preprocess the dataset before feeding it into a machine learning model. This may include handling missing values, encoding categorical variables, scaling numerical features, and dealing with any other necessary data transformations.; Data Splitting: Describe how to split the preprocessed data into training and testing sets. Emphasize the importance of having separate data for training and evaluation to assess the model's performance accurately.; Model Building and Training: Explain how to choose an appropriate machine learning algorithm for heart attack prediction and how to build a model using libraries like Scikit-Learn. Outline the steps involved in training the model on the training dataset.; Model Evaluation: Describe how to evaluate the trained model's performance using appropriate evaluation metrics, such as accuracy, precision, recall, and F1 score. Demonstrate how to interpret the evaluation results and assess the model's predictive capabilities.; Predictions on New Data: Explain how to use the trained model to make predictions on new, unseen data. Demonstrate the process of feeding new data to the model and obtaining predictions for heart attack risk.

Book Data Science For Programmer  A Project Based Approach With Python GUI

Download or read book Data Science For Programmer A Project Based Approach With Python GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2021-08-19 with total page 520 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Book 1: Practical Data Science Programming for Medical Datasets Analysis and Prediction with Python GUI In this book, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In Project 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to perform how to predict early stage diabetes using Early Stage Diabetes Risk Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle. This dataset contains the sign and symptpom data of newly diabetic or would be diabetic patient. This has been collected using direct questionnaires from the patients of Sylhet Diabetes Hospital in Sylhet, Bangladesh and approved by a doctor. You will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and prediced values versus true values. The machine learning models used in this project are Adaboost, Random Forest, Gradient Boosting, Logistic Regression, and Support Vector Machine. In Project 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict breast cancer using Breast Cancer Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle. Worldwide, breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in women and the second highest in terms of mortality rates.Diagnosis of breast cancer is performed when an abnormal lump is found (from self-examination or x-ray) or a tiny speck of calcium is seen (on an x-ray). After a suspicious lump is found, the doctor will conduct a diagnosis to determine whether it is cancerous and, if so, whether it has spread to other parts of the body. This breast cancer dataset was obtained from the University of Wisconsin Hospitals, Madison from Dr. William H. Wolberg. You will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot distribution of features, pairwise relationship, test scores, prediced values versus true values, confusion matrix, and decision boundary. The machine learning models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, and Support Vector Machine. Book 2: Step by Step Tutorials For Data Science With Python GUI: Traffic And Heart Attack Analysis And Prediction In this book, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries to perform how to predict traffic (number of vehicles) in four different junctions using Traffic Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle. This dataset contains 48.1k (48120) observations of the number of vehicles each hour in four different junctions: 1) DateTime; 2) Juction; 3) Vehicles; and 4) ID. In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict heart attack using Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle. Book 3: BRAIN TUMOR: Analysis, Classification, and Detection Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI In this project, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, TensorFlow, Keras, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to implement brain tumor classification and detection with machine learning using Brain Tumor dataset provided by Kaggle. This dataset contains five first order features: Mean (the contribution of individual pixel intensity for the entire image), Variance (used to find how each pixel varies from the neighboring pixel 0, Standard Deviation (the deviation of measured Values or the data from its mean), Skewness (measures of symmetry), and Kurtosis (describes the peak of e.g. a frequency distribution). It also contains eight second order features: Contrast, Energy, ASM (Angular second moment), Entropy, Homogeneity, Dissimilarity, Correlation, and Coarseness. The machine learning models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, and Support Vector Machine. The deep learning models used in this project are MobileNet and ResNet50. In this project, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, training loss, and training accuracy.

Book Data Science and Deep Learning Workshop For Scientists and Engineers

Download or read book Data Science and Deep Learning Workshop For Scientists and Engineers written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2021-11-04 with total page 1977 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: WORKSHOP 1: In this workshop, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to implement deep learning on recognizing traffic signs using GTSRB dataset, detecting brain tumor using Brain Image MRI dataset, classifying gender, and recognizing facial expression using FER2013 dataset In Chapter 1, you will learn to create GUI applications to display line graph using PyQt. You will also learn how to display image and its histogram. In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform prediction on handwritten digits using MNIST dataset with PyQt. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 3, you will learn how to perform recognizing traffic signs using GTSRB dataset from Kaggle. There are several different types of traffic signs like speed limits, no entry, traffic signals, turn left or right, children crossing, no passing of heavy vehicles, etc. Traffic signs classification is the process of identifying which class a traffic sign belongs to. In this Python project, you will build a deep neural network model that can classify traffic signs in image into different categories. With this model, you will be able to read and understand traffic signs which are a very important task for all autonomous vehicles. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 4, you will learn how to perform detecting brain tumor using Brain Image MRI dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/navoneel/brain-mri-images-for-brain-tumor-detection) using CNN model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 5, you will learn how to perform classifying gender using dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/cashutosh/gender-classification-dataset) using MobileNetV2 and CNN models. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 6, you will learn how to perform recognizing facial expression using FER2013 dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/nicolejyt/facialexpressionrecognition) using CNN model. You will also build a GUI application for this purpose. WORKSHOP 2: In this workshop, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to implement deep learning on classifying fruits, classifying cats/dogs, detecting furnitures, and classifying fashion. In Chapter 1, you will learn to create GUI applications to display line graph using PyQt. You will also learn how to display image and its histogram. Then, you will learn how to use OpenCV, NumPy, and other libraries to perform feature extraction with Python GUI (PyQt). The feature detection techniques used in this chapter are Harris Corner Detection, Shi-Tomasi Corner Detector, and Scale-Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying fruits using Fruits 360 dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/moltean/fruits/code) using Transfer Learning and CNN models. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying cats/dogs using dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/chetankv/dogs-cats-images) using Using CNN with Data Generator. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 4, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting furnitures using Furniture Detector dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/akkithetechie/furniture-detector) using VGG16 model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 5, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying fashion using Fashion MNIST dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/zalando-research/fashionmnist/code) using CNN model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. WORKSHOP 3: In this workshop, you will implement deep learning on detecting vehicle license plates, recognizing sign language, and detecting surface crack using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting vehicle license plates using Car License Plate Detection dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/andrewmvd/car-plate-detection/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform sign language recognition using Sign Language Digits Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/ardamavi/sign-language-digits-dataset/download). In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting surface crack using Surface Crack Detection provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/arunrk7/surface-crack-detection/download). WORKSHOP 4: In this workshop, implement deep learning-based image classification on detecting face mask, classifying weather, and recognizing flower using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting face mask using Face Mask Detection Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/omkargurav/face-mask-dataset/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to classify weather using Multi-class Weather Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/pratik2901/multiclass-weather-dataset/download). WORKSHOP 5: In this workshop, implement deep learning-based image classification on classifying monkey species, recognizing rock, paper, and scissor, and classify airplane, car, and ship using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to classify monkey species using 10 Monkey Species dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/slothkong/10-monkey-species/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to recognize rock, paper, and scissor using 10 Monkey Species dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/sanikamal/rock-paper-scissors-dataset/download). WORKSHOP 6: In this worksshop, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries to perform how to predict traffic (number of vehicles) in four different junctions using Traffic Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/fedesoriano/traffic-prediction-dataset/download). This dataset contains 48.1k (48120) observations of the number of vehicles each hour in four different junctions: 1) DateTime; 2) Juction; 3) Vehicles; and 4) ID. In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict heart attack using Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/rashikrahmanpritom/heart-attack-analysis-prediction-dataset/download). WORKSHOP 7: In this workshop, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In Project 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to perform how to predict early stage diabetes using Early Stage Diabetes Risk Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/ishandutta/early-stage-diabetes-risk-prediction-dataset/download). This dataset contains the sign and symptpom data of newly diabetic or would be diabetic patient. This has been collected using direct questionnaires from the patients of Sylhet Diabetes Hospital in Sylhet, Bangladesh and approved by a doctor. You will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and prediced values versus true values. The machine learning models used in this project are Adaboost, Random Forest, Gradient Boosting, Logistic Regression, and Support Vector Machine. In Project 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict breast cancer using Breast Cancer Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/merishnasuwal/breast-cancer-prediction-dataset/download). Worldwide, breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in women and the second highest in terms of mortality rates.Diagnosis of breast cancer is performed when an abnormal lump is found (from self-examination or x-ray) or a tiny speck of calcium is seen (on an x-ray). After a suspicious lump is found, the doctor will conduct a diagnosis to determine whether it is cancerous and, if so, whether it has spread to other parts of the body. This breast cancer dataset was obtained from the University of Wisconsin Hospitals, Madison from Dr. William H. Wolberg. You will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot distribution of features, pairwise relationship, test scores, prediced values versus true values, confusion matrix, and decision boundary. The machine learning models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, and Support Vector Machine. WORKSHOP 8: In this workshop, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, TensorFlow, Keras, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to implement brain tumor classification and detection with machine learning using Brain Tumor dataset provided by Kaggle. This dataset contains five first order features: Mean (the contribution of individual pixel intensity for the entire image), Variance (used to find how each pixel varies from the neighboring pixel 0, Standard Deviation (the deviation of measured Values or the data from its mean), Skewness (measures of symmetry), and Kurtosis (describes the peak of e.g. a frequency distribution). It also contains eight second order features: Contrast, Energy, ASM (Angular second moment), Entropy, Homogeneity, Dissimilarity, Correlation, and Coarseness. The machine learning models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, and Support Vector Machine. The deep learning models used in this project are MobileNet and ResNet50. In this project, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 9: In this workshop, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Keras, TensorFlow, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to perform COVID-19 Epitope Prediction using COVID-19/SARS B-cell Epitope Prediction dataset provided in Kaggle. All of three datasets consists of information of protein and peptide: parent_protein_id : parent protein ID; protein_seq : parent protein sequence; start_position : start position of peptide; end_position : end position of peptide; peptide_seq : peptide sequence; chou_fasman : peptide feature; emini : peptide feature, relative surface accessibility; kolaskar_tongaonkar : peptide feature, antigenicity; parker : peptide feature, hydrophobicity; isoelectric_point : protein feature; aromacity: protein feature; hydrophobicity : protein feature; stability : protein feature; and target : antibody valence (target value). The machine learning models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, and MLP classifier. Then, you will learn how to use sequential CNN and VGG16 models to detect and predict Covid-19 X-RAY using COVID-19 Xray Dataset (Train & Test Sets) provided in Kaggle. The folder itself consists of two subfolders: test and train. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 10: In this workshop, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Keras, TensorFlow, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to perform analyzing and predicting stroke using dataset provided in Kaggle. The dataset consists of attribute information: id: unique identifier; gender: "Male", "Female" or "Other"; age: age of the patient; hypertension: 0 if the patient doesn't have hypertension, 1 if the patient has hypertension; heart_disease: 0 if the patient doesn't have any heart diseases, 1 if the patient has a heart disease; ever_married: "No" or "Yes"; work_type: "children", "Govt_jov", "Never_worked", "Private" or "Self-employed"; Residence_type: "Rural" or "Urban"; avg_glucose_level: average glucose level in blood; bmi: body mass index; smoking_status: "formerly smoked", "never smoked", "smokes" or "Unknown"; and stroke: 1 if the patient had a stroke or 0 if not. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 11: In this workshop, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Keras, TensorFlow, NumPy, Pandas, Seaborn, and other libraries to perform classifying and predicting Hepatitis C using dataset provided by UCI Machine Learning Repository. All attributes in dataset except Category and Sex are numerical. Attributes 1 to 4 refer to the data of the patient: X (Patient ID/No.), Category (diagnosis) (values: '0=Blood Donor', '0s=suspect Blood Donor', '1=Hepatitis', '2=Fibrosis', '3=Cirrhosis'), Age (in years), Sex (f,m), ALB, ALP, ALT, AST, BIL, CHE, CHOL, CREA, GGT, and PROT. The target attribute for classification is Category (2): blood donors vs. Hepatitis C patients (including its progress ('just' Hepatitis C, Fibrosis, Cirrhosis). The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and ANN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy.

Book Hands On Guide On Data Science and Machine Learning with Python GUI

Download or read book Hands On Guide On Data Science and Machine Learning with Python GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2021-07-08 with total page 222 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this book, you will implement two data science projects using Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries with Python GUI. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, Scipy, and other libraries to perform how to predict traffic (number of vehicles) in four different junctions using Traffic Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/fedesoriano/traffic-prediction-dataset/download). This dataset contains 48.1k (48120) observations of the number of vehicles each hour in four different junctions: 1) DateTime; 2) Juction; 3) Vehicles; and 4) ID. In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to analyze and predict heart attack using Heart Attack Analysis & Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/rashikrahmanpritom/heart-attack-analysis-prediction-dataset/download). In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use Scikit-Learn, SVM, NumPy, Pandas, and other libraries to perform how to predict early stage diabetes using Early Stage Diabetes Risk Prediction Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/ishandutta/early-stage-diabetes-risk-prediction-dataset/download). This dataset contains the sign and symptpom data of newly diabetic or would be diabetic patient. This has been collected using direct questionnaires from the patients of Sylhet Diabetes Hospital in Sylhet, Bangladesh and approved by a doctor.

Book The Applied Data Science Workshop On Medical Datasets Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI

Download or read book The Applied Data Science Workshop On Medical Datasets Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on with total page 1574 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Workshop 1: Heart Failure Analysis and Prediction Using Scikit-Learn, Keras, and TensorFlow with Python GUI Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the number 1 cause of death globally taking an estimated 17.9 million lives each year, which accounts for 31% of all deaths worldwide. Heart failure is a common event caused by CVDs and this dataset contains 12 features that can be used to predict mortality by heart failure. People with cardiovascular disease or who are at high cardiovascular risk (due to the presence of one or more risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia or already established disease) need early detection and management wherein a machine learning models can be of great help. Dataset used in this project is from Davide Chicco, Giuseppe Jurman. Machine learning can predict survival of patients with heart failure from serum creatinine and ejection fraction alone. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 20, 16 (2020). Attribute information in the dataset are as follows: age: Age; anaemia: Decrease of red blood cells or hemoglobin (boolean); creatinine_phosphokinase: Level of the CPK enzyme in the blood (mcg/L); diabetes: If the patient has diabetes (boolean); ejection_fraction: Percentage of blood leaving the heart at each contraction (percentage); high_blood_pressure: If the patient has hypertension (boolean); platelets: Platelets in the blood (kiloplatelets/mL); serum_creatinine: Level of serum creatinine in the blood (mg/dL); serum_sodium: Level of serum sodium in the blood (mEq/L); sex: Woman or man (binary); smoking: If the patient smokes or not (boolean); time: Follow-up period (days); and DEATH_EVENT: If the patient deceased during the follow-up period (boolean). The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 2: Cervical Cancer Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI About 11,000 new cases of invasive cervical cancer are diagnosed each year in the U.S. However, the number of new cervical cancer cases has been declining steadily over the past decades. Although it is the most preventable type of cancer, each year cervical cancer kills about 4,000 women in the U.S. and about 300,000 women worldwide. Numerous studies report that high poverty levels are linked with low screening rates. In addition, lack of health insurance, limited transportation, and language difficulties hinder a poor woman’s access to screening services. Human papilloma virus (HPV) is the main risk factor for cervical cancer. In adults, the most important risk factor for HPV is sexual activity with an infected person. Women most at risk for cervical cancer are those with a history of multiple sexual partners, sexual intercourse at age 17 years or younger, or both. A woman who has never been sexually active has a very low risk for developing cervical cancer. Sexual activity with multiple partners increases the likelihood of many other sexually transmitted infections (chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis). Studies have found an association between chlamydia and cervical cancer risk, including the possibility that chlamydia may prolong HPV infection. Therefore, early detection of cervical cancer using machine and deep learning models can be of great help. The dataset used in this project is obtained from UCI Repository and kindly acknowledged. This file contains a List of Risk Factors for Cervical Cancer leading to a Biopsy Examination. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 3: Chronic Kidney Disease Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI Chronic kidney disease is the longstanding disease of the kidneys leading to renal failure. The kidneys filter waste and excess fluid from the blood. As kidneys fail, waste builds up. Symptoms develop slowly and aren't specific to the disease. Some people have no symptoms at all and are diagnosed by a lab test. Medication helps manage symptoms. In later stages, filtering the blood with a machine (dialysis) or a transplant may be required The dataset used in this project was taken over a 2-month period in India with 25 features (eg, red blood cell count, white blood cell count, etc). The target is the 'classification', which is either 'ckd' or 'notckd' - ckd=chronic kidney disease. It contains measures of 24 features for 400 people. Quite a lot of features for just 400 samples. There are 14 categorical features, while 10 are numerical. The dataset needs cleaning: in that it has NaNs and the numeric features need to be forced to floats. Attribute Information: Age(numerical) age in years; Blood Pressure(numerical) bp in mm/Hg; Specific Gravity(categorical) sg - (1.005,1.010,1.015,1.020,1.025); Albumin(categorical) al - (0,1,2,3,4,5); Sugar(categorical) su - (0,1,2,3,4,5); Red Blood Cells(categorical) rbc - (normal,abnormal); Pus Cell (categorical) pc - (normal,abnormal); Pus Cell clumps(categorical) pcc - (present, notpresent); Bacteria(categorical) ba - (present,notpresent); Blood Glucose Random(numerical) bgr in mgs/dl; Blood Urea(numerical) bu in mgs/dl; Serum Creatinine(numerical) sc in mgs/dl; Sodium(numerical) sod in mEq/L; Potassium(numerical) pot in mEq/L; Hemoglobin(numerical) hemo in gms; Packed Cell Volume(numerical); White Blood Cell Count(numerical) wc in cells/cumm; Red Blood Cell Count(numerical) rc in millions/cmm; Hypertension(categorical) htn - (yes,no); Diabetes Mellitus(categorical) dm - (yes,no); Coronary Artery Disease(categorical) cad - (yes,no); Appetite(categorical) appet - (good,poor); Pedal Edema(categorical) pe - (yes,no); Anemia(categorical) ane - (yes,no); and Class (categorical) class - (ckd,notckd). The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 4: Lung Cancer Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI The effectiveness of cancer prediction system helps the people to know their cancer risk with low cost and it also helps the people to take the appropriate decision based on their cancer risk status. The data is collected from the website online lung cancer prediction system. Total number of attributes in the dataset is 16, while number of instances is 309. Following are attribute information of dataset: Gender: M(male), F(female); Age: Age of the patient; Smoking: YES=2 , NO=1; Yellow fingers: YES=2 , NO=1; Anxiety: YES=2 , NO=1; Peer_pressure: YES=2 , NO=1; Chronic Disease: YES=2 , NO=1; Fatigue: YES=2 , NO=1; Allergy: YES=2 , NO=1; Wheezing: YES=2 , NO=1; Alcohol: YES=2 , NO=1; Coughing: YES=2 , NO=1; Shortness of Breath: YES=2 , NO=1; Swallowing Difficulty: YES=2 , NO=1; Chest pain: YES=2 , NO=1; and Lung Cancer: YES , NO. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performace of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 5: Alzheimer’s Disease Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI Alzheimer's is a type of dementia that causes problems with memory, thinking and behavior. Symptoms usually develop slowly and get worse over time, becoming severe enough to interfere with daily tasks. Alzheimer's is not a normal part of aging. The greatest known risk factor is increasing age, and the majority of people with Alzheimer's are 65 and older. But Alzheimer's is not just a disease of old age. Approximately 200,000 Americans under the age of 65 have younger-onset Alzheimer’s disease (also known as early-onset Alzheimer’s). The dataset consists of a longitudinal MRI data of 374 subjects aged 60 to 96. Each subject was scanned at least once. Everyone is right-handed. 206 of the subjects were grouped as 'Nondemented' throughout the study. 107 of the subjects were grouped as 'Demented' at the time of their initial visits and remained so throughout the study. 14 subjects were grouped as 'Nondemented' at the time of their initial visit and were subsequently characterized as 'Demented' at a later visit. These fall under the 'Converted' category. Following are some important features in the dataset: EDUC:Years of Education; SES: Socioeconomic Status; MMSE: Mini Mental State Examination; CDR: Clinical Dementia Rating; eTIV: Estimated Total Intracranial Volume; nWBV: Normalize Whole Brain Volume; and ASF: Atlas Scaling Factor. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 6: Parkinson Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI The dataset was created by Max Little of the University of Oxford, in collaboration with the National Centre for Voice and Speech, Denver, Colorado, who recorded the speech signals. The original study published the feature extraction methods for general voice disorders. This dataset is composed of a range of biomedical voice measurements from 31 people, 23 with Parkinson's disease (PD). Each column in the table is a particular voice measure, and each row corresponds one of 195 voice recording from these individuals ("name" column). The main aim of the data is to discriminate healthy people from those with PD, according to "status" column which is set to 0 for healthy and 1 for PD. The data is in ASCII CSV format. The rows of the CSV file contain an instance corresponding to one voice recording. There are around six recordings per patient, the name of the patient is identified in the first column. Attribute information of this dataset are as follows: name - ASCII subject name and recording number; MDVP:Fo(Hz) - Average vocal fundamental frequency; MDVP:Fhi(Hz) - Maximum vocal fundamental frequency; MDVP:Flo(Hz) - Minimum vocal fundamental frequency; MDVP:Jitter(%); MDVP:Jitter(Abs); MDVP:RAP; MDVP:PPQ; Jitter:DDP – Several measures of variation in fundamental frequency; MDVP:Shimmer; MDVP:Shimmer(dB); Shimmer:APQ3; Shimmer:APQ5; MDVP:APQ; Shimmer:DDA - Several measures of variation in amplitude; NHR; HNR - Two measures of ratio of noise to tonal components in the voice; status - Health status of the subject (one) - Parkinson's, (zero) – healthy; RPDE,D2 - Two nonlinear dynamical complexity measures; DFA - Signal fractal scaling exponent; and spread1,spread2,PPE - Three nonlinear measures of fundamental frequency variation. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. WORKSHOP 7: Liver Disease Classification and Prediction Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning with Python GUI Patients with Liver disease have been continuously increasing because of excessive consumption of alcohol, inhale of harmful gases, intake of contaminated food, pickles and drugs. This dataset was used to evaluate prediction algorithms in an effort to reduce burden on doctors. This dataset contains 416 liver patient records and 167 non liver patient records collected from North East of Andhra Pradesh, India. The "Dataset" column is a class label used to divide groups into liver patient (liver disease) or not (no disease). This data set contains 441 male patient records and 142 female patient records. Any patient whose age exceeded 89 is listed as being of age "90". Columns in the dataset: Age of the patient; Gender of the patient; Total Bilirubin; Direct Bilirubin; Alkaline Phosphotase; Alamine Aminotransferase; Aspartate Aminotransferase; Total Protiens; Albumin; Albumin and Globulin Ratio; and Dataset: field used to split the data into two sets (patient with liver disease, or no disease). The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, MLP classifier, and CNN 1D. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot boundary decision, ROC, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy.

Book In Depth Tutorials  Deep Learning Using Scikit Learn  Keras  and TensorFlow with Python GUI

Download or read book In Depth Tutorials Deep Learning Using Scikit Learn Keras and TensorFlow with Python GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2021-06-05 with total page 1459 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: BOOK 1: LEARN FROM SCRATCH MACHINE LEARNING WITH PYTHON GUI In this book, you will learn how to use NumPy, Pandas, OpenCV, Scikit-Learn and other libraries to how to plot graph and to process digital image. Then, you will learn how to classify features using Perceptron, Adaline, Logistic Regression (LR), Support Vector Machine (SVM), Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF), and K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) models. You will also learn how to extract features using Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA), Kernel Principal Component Analysis (KPCA) algorithms and use them in machine learning. In Chapter 1, you will learn: Tutorial Steps To Create A Simple GUI Application, Tutorial Steps to Use Radio Button, Tutorial Steps to Group Radio Buttons, Tutorial Steps to Use CheckBox Widget, Tutorial Steps to Use Two CheckBox Groups, Tutorial Steps to Understand Signals and Slots, Tutorial Steps to Convert Data Types, Tutorial Steps to Use Spin Box Widget, Tutorial Steps to Use ScrollBar and Slider, Tutorial Steps to Use List Widget, Tutorial Steps to Select Multiple List Items in One List Widget and Display It in Another List Widget, Tutorial Steps to Insert Item into List Widget, Tutorial Steps to Use Operations on Widget List, Tutorial Steps to Use Combo Box, Tutorial Steps to Use Calendar Widget and Date Edit, and Tutorial Steps to Use Table Widget. In Chapter 2, you will learn: Tutorial Steps To Create A Simple Line Graph, Tutorial Steps To Create A Simple Line Graph in Python GUI, Tutorial Steps To Create A Simple Line Graph in Python GUI: Part 2, Tutorial Steps To Create Two or More Graphs in the Same Axis, Tutorial Steps To Create Two Axes in One Canvas, Tutorial Steps To Use Two Widgets, Tutorial Steps To Use Two Widgets, Each of Which Has Two Axes, Tutorial Steps To Use Axes With Certain Opacity Levels, Tutorial Steps To Choose Line Color From Combo Box, Tutorial Steps To Calculate Fast Fourier Transform, Tutorial Steps To Create GUI For FFT, Tutorial Steps To Create GUI For FFT With Some Other Input Signals, Tutorial Steps To Create GUI For Noisy Signal, Tutorial Steps To Create GUI For Noisy Signal Filtering, and Tutorial Steps To Create GUI For Wav Signal Filtering. In Chapter 3, you will learn: Tutorial Steps To Convert RGB Image Into Grayscale, Tutorial Steps To Convert RGB Image Into YUV Image, Tutorial Steps To Convert RGB Image Into HSV Image, Tutorial Steps To Filter Image, Tutorial Steps To Display Image Histogram, Tutorial Steps To Display Filtered Image Histogram, Tutorial Steps To Filter Image With CheckBoxes, Tutorial Steps To Implement Image Thresholding, and Tutorial Steps To Implement Adaptive Image Thresholding. You will also learn: Tutorial Steps To Generate And Display Noisy Image, Tutorial Steps To Implement Edge Detection On Image, Tutorial Steps To Implement Image Segmentation Using Multiple Thresholding and K-Means Algorithm, Tutorial Steps To Implement Image Denoising, Tutorial Steps To Detect Face, Eye, and Mouth Using Haar Cascades, Tutorial Steps To Detect Face Using Haar Cascades with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Detect Eye, and Mouth Using Haar Cascades with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Extract Detected Objects, Tutorial Steps To Detect Image Features Using Harris Corner Detection, Tutorial Steps To Detect Image Features Using Shi-Tomasi Corner Detection, Tutorial Steps To Detect Features Using Scale-Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT), and Tutorial Steps To Detect Features Using Features from Accelerated Segment Test (FAST). In Chapter 4, In this tutorial, you will learn how to use Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform simple classification using perceptron and Adaline (adaptive linear neuron). The dataset used is Iris dataset directly from the UCI Machine Learning Repository. You will learn: Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron, Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Adaline (ADAptive LInear NEuron), and Tutorial Steps To Implement Adaline with PyQt. In Chapter 5, you will learn how to use the scikit-learn machine learning library, which provides a wide variety of machine learning algorithms via a user-friendly Python API and to perform classification using perceptron, Adaline (adaptive linear neuron), and other models. The dataset used is Iris dataset directly from the UCI Machine Learning Repository. You will learn: Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron Using Scikit-Learn, Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron Using Scikit-Learn with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression Model, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression Model with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression Model Using Scikit-Learn with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Support Vector Machine (SVM) Using Scikit-Learn, Tutorial Steps To Implement Decision Tree (DT) Using Scikit-Learn, Tutorial Steps To Implement Random Forest (RF) Using Scikit-Learn, and Tutorial Steps To Implement K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) Using Scikit-Learn. In Chapter 6, you will learn how to use Pandas, NumPy, Scikit-Learn, and other libraries to implement different approaches for reducing the dimensionality of a dataset using different feature selection techniques. You will learn about three fundamental techniques that will help us to summarize the information content of a dataset by transforming it onto a new feature subspace of lower dimensionality than the original one. Data compression is an important topic in machine learning, and it helps us to store and analyze the increasing amounts of data that are produced and collected in the modern age of technology. You will learn the following topics: Principal Component Analysis (PCA) for unsupervised data compression, Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) as a supervised dimensionality reduction technique for maximizing class separability, Nonlinear dimensionality reduction via Kernel Principal Component Analysis (KPCA). You will learn: Tutorial Steps To Implement Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Tutorial Steps To Implement Principal Component Analysis (PCA) Using Scikit-Learn, Tutorial Steps To Implement Principal Component Analysis (PCA) Using Scikit-Learn with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA), Tutorial Steps To Implement Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) with Scikit-Learn, Tutorial Steps To Implement Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) Using Scikit-Learn with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Kernel Principal Component Analysis (KPCA) Using Scikit-Learn, and Tutorial Steps To Implement Kernel Principal Component Analysis (KPCA) Using Scikit-Learn with PyQt. In Chapter 7, you will learn how to use Keras, Scikit-Learn, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform prediction on handwritten digits using MNIST dataset. You will learn: Tutorial Steps To Load MNIST Dataset, Tutorial Steps To Load MNIST Dataset with PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron With PCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Perceptron With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression (LR) Model With PCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression (LR) Model With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Logistic Regression (LR) Model With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement , Tutorial Steps To Implement Support Vector Machine (SVM) Model With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Support Vector Machine (SVM) Model With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Decision Tree (DT) Model With PCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Decision Tree (DT) Model With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Decision Tree (DT) Model With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Random Forest (RF) Model With PCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Random Forest (RF) Model With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement Random Forest (RF) Model With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) Model With PCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, Tutorial Steps To Implement K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) Model With LDA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt, and Tutorial Steps To Implement K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN) Model With KPCA Feature Extractor on MNIST Dataset Using PyQt. BOOK 2: THE PRACTICAL GUIDES ON DEEP LEARNING USING SCIKIT-LEARN, KERAS, AND TENSORFLOW WITH PYTHON GUI In this book, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to implement deep learning on recognizing traffic signs using GTSRB dataset, detecting brain tumor using Brain Image MRI dataset, classifying gender, and recognizing facial expression using FER2013 dataset In Chapter 1, you will learn to create GUI applications to display line graph using PyQt. You will also learn how to display image and its histogram. In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform prediction on handwritten digits using MNIST dataset with PyQt. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 3, you will learn how to perform recognizing traffic signs using GTSRB dataset from Kaggle. There are several different types of traffic signs like speed limits, no entry, traffic signals, turn left or right, children crossing, no passing of heavy vehicles, etc. Traffic signs classification is the process of identifying which class a traffic sign belongs to. In this Python project, you will build a deep neural network model that can classify traffic signs in image into different categories. With this model, you will be able to read and understand traffic signs which are a very important task for all autonomous vehicles. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 4, you will learn how to perform detecting brain tumor using Brain Image MRI dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/navoneel/brain-mri-images-for-brain-tumor-detection) using CNN model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 5, you will learn how to perform classifying gender using dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/cashutosh/gender-classification-dataset) using MobileNetV2 and CNN models. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 6, you will learn how to perform recognizing facial expression using FER2013 dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/nicolejyt/facialexpressionrecognition) using CNN model. You will also build a GUI application for this purpose. BOOK 3: STEP BY STEP TUTORIALS ON DEEP LEARNING USING SCIKIT-LEARN, KERAS, AND TENSORFLOW WITH PYTHON GUI In this book, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to implement deep learning on classifying fruits, classifying cats/dogs, detecting furnitures, and classifying fashion. In Chapter 1, you will learn to create GUI applications to display line graph using PyQt. You will also learn how to display image and its histogram. Then, you will learn how to use OpenCV, NumPy, and other libraries to perform feature extraction with Python GUI (PyQt). The feature detection techniques used in this chapter are Harris Corner Detection, Shi-Tomasi Corner Detector, and Scale-Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying fruits using Fruits 360 dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/moltean/fruits/code) using Transfer Learning and CNN models. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying cats/dogs using dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/chetankv/dogs-cats-images) using Using CNN with Data Generator. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 4, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting furnitures using Furniture Detector dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/akkithetechie/furniture-detector) using VGG16 model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. In Chapter 5, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform classifying fashion using Fashion MNIST dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/zalando-research/fashionmnist/code) using CNN model. You will build a GUI application for this purpose. BOOK 4: Project-Based Approach On DEEP LEARNING Using Scikit-Learn, Keras, And TensorFlow with Python GUI In this book, implement deep learning on detecting vehicle license plates, recognizing sign language, and detecting surface crack using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting vehicle license plates using Car License Plate Detection dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/andrewmvd/car-plate-detection/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform sign language recognition using Sign Language Digits Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/ardamavi/sign-language-digits-dataset/download). In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting surface crack using Surface Crack Detection provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/arunrk7/surface-crack-detection/download). BOOK 5: Hands-On Guide To IMAGE CLASSIFICATION Using Scikit-Learn, Keras, And TensorFlow with PYTHON GUI In this book, implement deep learning-based image classification on detecting face mask, classifying weather, and recognizing flower using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform detecting face mask using Face Mask Detection Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/omkargurav/face-mask-dataset/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to classify weather using Multi-class Weather Dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/pratik2901/multiclass-weather-dataset/download). In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to recognize flower using Flowers Recognition dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/alxmamaev/flowers-recognition/download). BOOK 6: Step by Step Tutorial IMAGE CLASSIFICATION Using Scikit-Learn, Keras, And TensorFlow with PYTHON GUI In this book, implement deep learning-based image classification on classifying monkey species, recognizing rock, paper, and scissor, and classify airplane, car, and ship using TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries. In Chapter 1, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to classify monkey species using 10 Monkey Species dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/slothkong/10-monkey-species/download). In Chapter 2, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to recognize rock, paper, and scissor using 10 Monkey Species dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/sanikamal/rock-paper-scissors-dataset/download). In Chapter 3, you will learn how to use TensorFlow, Keras, Scikit-Learn, OpenCV, Pandas, NumPy and other libraries to perform how to classify airplane, car, and ship using Multiclass-image-dataset-airplane-car-ship dataset provided by Kaggle (https://www.kaggle.com/abtabm/multiclassimagedatasetairplanecar).

Book 5 FIVE DATA SCIENCE PROJECTS FOR ANALYSIS  CLASSIFICATION  PREDICTION  AND SENTIMENT ANALYSIS WITH PYTHON GUI

Download or read book 5 FIVE DATA SCIENCE PROJECTS FOR ANALYSIS CLASSIFICATION PREDICTION AND SENTIMENT ANALYSIS WITH PYTHON GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2022-04-29 with total page 979 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: PROJECT 1: SUPERMARKET SALES ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH PYTHON GUI The dataset used in this project consists of the growth of supermarkets with high market competitions in most populated cities. The dataset is one of the historical sales of supermarket company which has recorded in 3 different branches for 3 months data. Predictive data analytics methods are easy to apply with this dataset. Attribute information in the dataset are as follows: Invoice id: Computer generated sales slip invoice identification number; Branch: Branch of supercenter (3 branches are available identified by A, B and C); City: Location of supercenters; Customer type: Type of customers, recorded by Members for customers using member card and Normal for without member card; Gender: Gender type of customer; Product line: General item categorization groups - Electronic accessories, Fashion accessories, Food and beverages, Health and beauty, Home and lifestyle, Sports and travel; Unit price: Price of each product in $; Quantity: Number of products purchased by customer; Tax: 5% tax fee for customer buying; Total: Total price including tax; Date: Date of purchase (Record available from January 2019 to March 2019); Time: Purchase time (10am to 9pm); Payment: Payment used by customer for purchase (3 methods are available – Cash, Credit card and Ewallet); COGS: Cost of goods sold; Gross margin percentage: Gross margin percentage; Gross income: Gross income; and Rating: Customer stratification rating on their overall shopping experience (On a scale of 1 to 10). In this project, you will perform predicting rating using machine learning. The machine learning models used in this project to predict clusters as target variable are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, LGBM, Gradient Boosting, XGB, and MLP. Finally, you will plot boundary decision, distribution of features, feature importance, cross validation score, and predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. PROJECT 2: DETECTING CYBERBULLYING TWEETS USING MACHINE LEARNING AND DEEP LEARNING WITH PYTHON GUI As social media usage becomes increasingly prevalent in every age group, a vast majority of citizens rely on this essential medium for day-to-day communication. Social media’s ubiquity means that cyberbullying can effectively impact anyone at any time or anywhere, and the relative anonymity of the internet makes such personal attacks more difficult to stop than traditional bullying. On April 15th, 2020, UNICEF issued a warning in response to the increased risk of cyberbullying during the COVID-19 pandemic due to widespread school closures, increased screen time, and decreased face-to-face social interaction. The statistics of cyberbullying are outright alarming: 36.5% of middle and high school students have felt cyberbullied and 87% have observed cyberbullying, with effects ranging from decreased academic performance to depression to suicidal thoughts. In light of all of this, this dataset contains more than 47000 tweets labelled according to the class of cyberbullying: Age; Ethnicity; Gender; Religion; Other type of cyberbullying; and Not cyberbullying. The data has been balanced in order to contain ~8000 of each class. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, XGB classifier, LSTM, and CNN. Three feature scaling used in machine learning are raw, minmax scaler, and standard scaler. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot cross validation score, predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, decision boundaries, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. PROJECT 3: HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENT ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH PYTHON GUI The dataset used in this project was collected from the Faculty of Engineering and Faculty of Educational Sciences students in 2019. The purpose is to predict students' end-of-term performances using ML techniques. Attribute information in the dataset are as follows: Student ID; Student Age (1: 18-21, 2: 22-25, 3: above 26); Sex (1: female, 2: male); Graduated high-school type: (1: private, 2: state, 3: other); Scholarship type: (1: None, 2: 25%, 3: 50%, 4: 75%, 5: Full); Additional work: (1: Yes, 2: No); Regular artistic or sports activity: (1: Yes, 2: No); Do you have a partner: (1: Yes, 2: No); Total salary if available (1: USD 135-200, 2: USD 201-270, 3: USD 271-340, 4: USD 341-410, 5: above 410); Transportation to the university: (1: Bus, 2: Private car/taxi, 3: bicycle, 4: Other); Accommodation type in Cyprus: (1: rental, 2: dormitory, 3: with family, 4: Other); Mother's education: (1: primary school, 2: secondary school, 3: high school, 4: university, 5: MSc., 6: Ph.D.); Father's education: (1: primary school, 2: secondary school, 3: high school, 4: university, 5: MSc., 6: Ph.D.); Number of sisters/brothers (if available): (1: 1, 2:, 2, 3: 3, 4: 4, 5: 5 or above); Parental status: (1: married, 2: divorced, 3: died - one of them or both); Mother's occupation: (1: retired, 2: housewife, 3: government officer, 4: private sector employee, 5: self-employment, 6: other); Father's occupation: (1: retired, 2: government officer, 3: private sector employee, 4: self-employment, 5: other); Weekly study hours: (1: None, 2: <5 hours, 3: 6-10 hours, 4: 11-20 hours, 5: more than 20 hours); Reading frequency (non-scientific books/journals): (1: None, 2: Sometimes, 3: Often); Reading frequency (scientific books/journals): (1: None, 2: Sometimes, 3: Often); Attendance to the seminars/conferences related to the department: (1: Yes, 2: No); Impact of your projects/activities on your success: (1: positive, 2: negative, 3: neutral); Attendance to classes (1: always, 2: sometimes, 3: never); Preparation to midterm exams 1: (1: alone, 2: with friends, 3: not applicable); Preparation to midterm exams 2: (1: closest date to the exam, 2: regularly during the semester, 3: never); Taking notes in classes: (1: never, 2: sometimes, 3: always); Listening in classes: (1: never, 2: sometimes, 3: always); Discussion improves my interest and success in the course: (1: never, 2: sometimes, 3: always); Flip-classroom: (1: not useful, 2: useful, 3: not applicable); Cumulative grade point average in the last semester (/4.00): (1: <2.00, 2: 2.00-2.49, 3: 2.50-2.99, 4: 3.00-3.49, 5: above 3.49); Expected Cumulative grade point average in the graduation (/4.00): (1: <2.00, 2: 2.00-2.49, 3: 2.50-2.99, 4: 3.00-3.49, 5: above 3.49); Course ID; and OUTPUT: Grade (0: Fail, 1: DD, 2: DC, 3: CC, 4: CB, 5: BB, 6: BA, 7: AA). The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, and XGB classifier. Three feature scaling used in machine learning are raw, minmax scaler, and standard scaler. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot cross validation score, predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, decision boundaries, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. PROJECT 4: COMPANY BANKRUPTCY ANALYSIS AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH PYTHON GUI The dataset was collected from the Taiwan Economic Journal for the years 1999 to 2009. Company bankruptcy was defined based on the business regulations of the Taiwan Stock Exchange. Attribute information in the dataset are as follows: Y - Bankrupt?: Class label; X1 - ROA(C) before interest and depreciation before interest: Return On Total Assets(C); X2 - ROA(A) before interest and % after tax: Return On Total Assets(A); X3 - ROA(B) before interest and depreciation after tax: Return On Total Assets(B); X4 - Operating Gross Margin: Gross Profit/Net Sales; X5 - Realized Sales Gross Margin: Realized Gross Profit/Net Sales; X6 - Operating Profit Rate: Operating Income/Net Sales; X7 - Pre-tax net Interest Rate: Pre-Tax Income/Net Sales; X8 - After-tax net Interest Rate: Net Income/Net Sales; X9 - Non-industry income and expenditure/revenue: Net Non-operating Income Ratio; X10 - Continuous interest rate (after tax): Net Income-Exclude Disposal Gain or Loss/Net Sales; X11 - Operating Expense Rate: Operating Expenses/Net Sales; X12 - Research and development expense rate: (Research and Development Expenses)/Net Sales X13 - Cash flow rate: Cash Flow from Operating/Current Liabilities; X14 - Interest-bearing debt interest rate: Interest-bearing Debt/Equity; X15 - Tax rate (A): Effective Tax Rate; X16 - Net Value Per Share (B): Book Value Per Share(B); X17 - Net Value Per Share (A): Book Value Per Share(A); X18 - Net Value Per Share (C): Book Value Per Share(C); X19 - Persistent EPS in the Last Four Seasons: EPS-Net Income; X20 - Cash Flow Per Share; X21 - Revenue Per Share (Yuan ¥): Sales Per Share; X22 - Operating Profit Per Share (Yuan ¥): Operating Income Per Share; X23 - Per Share Net profit before tax (Yuan ¥): Pretax Income Per Share; X24 - Realized Sales Gross Profit Growth Rate; X25 - Operating Profit Growth Rate: Operating Income Growth; X26 - After-tax Net Profit Growth Rate: Net Income Growth; X27 - Regular Net Profit Growth Rate: Continuing Operating Income after Tax Growth; X28 - Continuous Net Profit Growth Rate: Net Income-Excluding Disposal Gain or Loss Growth; X29 - Total Asset Growth Rate: Total Asset Growth; X30 - Net Value Growth Rate: Total Equity Growth; X31 - Total Asset Return Growth Rate Ratio: Return on Total Asset Growth; X32 - Cash Reinvestment %: Cash Reinvestment Ratio X33 - Current Ratio; X34 - Quick Ratio: Acid Test; X35 - Interest Expense Ratio: Interest Expenses/Total Revenue; X36 - Total debt/Total net worth: Total Liability/Equity Ratio; X37 - Debt ratio %: Liability/Total Assets; X38 - Net worth/Assets: Equity/Total Assets; X39 - Long-term fund suitability ratio (A): (Long-term Liability+Equity)/Fixed Assets; X40 - Borrowing dependency: Cost of Interest-bearing Debt; X41 - Contingent liabilities/Net worth: Contingent Liability/Equity; X42 - Operating profit/Paid-in capital: Operating Income/Capital; X43 - Net profit before tax/Paid-in capital: Pretax Income/Capital; X44 - Inventory and accounts receivable/Net value: (Inventory+Accounts Receivables)/Equity; X45 - Total Asset Turnover; X46 - Accounts Receivable Turnover; X47 - Average Collection Days: Days Receivable Outstanding; X48 - Inventory Turnover Rate (times); X49 - Fixed Assets Turnover Frequency; X50 - Net Worth Turnover Rate (times): Equity Turnover; X51 - Revenue per person: Sales Per Employee; X52 - Operating profit per person: Operation Income Per Employee; X53 - Allocation rate per person: Fixed Assets Per Employee; X54 - Working Capital to Total Assets; X55 - Quick Assets/Total Assets; X56 - Current Assets/Total Assets; X57 - Cash/Total Assets; X58 - Quick Assets/Current Liability; X59 - Cash/Current Liability; X60 - Current Liability to Assets; X61 - Operating Funds to Liability; X62 - Inventory/Working Capital; X63 - Inventory/Current Liability X64 - Current Liabilities/Liability; X65 - Working Capital/Equity; X66 - Current Liabilities/Equity; X67 - Long-term Liability to Current Assets; X68 - Retained Earnings to Total Assets; X69 - Total income/Total expense; X70 - Total expense/Assets; X71 - Current Asset Turnover Rate: Current Assets to Sales; X72 - Quick Asset Turnover Rate: Quick Assets to Sales; X73 - Working capitcal Turnover Rate: Working Capital to Sales; X74 - Cash Turnover Rate: Cash to Sales; X75 - Cash Flow to Sales; X76 - Fixed Assets to Assets; X77 - Current Liability to Liability; X78 - Current Liability to Equity; X79 - Equity to Long-term Liability; X80 - Cash Flow to Total Assets; X81 - Cash Flow to Liability; X82 - CFO to Assets; X83 - Cash Flow to Equity; X84 - Current Liability to Current Assets; X85 - Liability-Assets Flag: 1 if Total Liability exceeds Total Assets, 0 otherwise; X86 - Net Income to Total Assets; X87 - Total assets to GNP price; X88 - No-credit Interval; X89 - Gross Profit to Sales; X90 - Net Income to Stockholder's Equity; X91 - Liability to Equity; X92 - Degree of Financial Leverage (DFL); X93 - Interest Coverage Ratio (Interest expense to EBIT); X94 - Net Income Flag: 1 if Net Income is Negative for the last two years, 0 otherwise; and X95 - Equity to Liabilitys. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, and XGB classifier. Three feature scaling used in machine learning are raw, minmax scaler, and standard scaler. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot cross validation score, predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, decision boundaries, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy. PROJECT 5: DATA SCIENCE FOR RAIN CLASSIFICATION AND PREDICTION WITH PYTHON GUI This dataset contains about 10 years of daily weather observations from many locations across Australia. RainTomorrow is the target variable to predict. You will determine rain or not in the next day. This column is Yes if the rain for that day was 1mm or more. Observations were drawn from numerous weather stations. The daily observations are available from http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/data. The dataset contains 23 attributes. Some of them are as follows: About some of them are: DATE - The date of observation; LOCATION - The common name of the location of the weather station; MINTEMP - The minimum temperature in degrees celsius; MAXTEMP - The maximum temperature in degrees celsius; RAINFALL - The amount of rainfall recorded for the day in mm; EVAPORATION - The so-called Class A pan evaporation (mm) in the 24 hours to 9am; SUNSHINE - The number of hours of bright sunshine in the day; WINDGUESTDIR - The direction of the strongest wind gust in the 24 hours to midnight; WINDGUESTSPEED- The speed (km/h) of the strongest wind gust in the 24 hours to midnight; and WINDDIR9AM - Direction of the wind at 9am. The models used in this project are K-Nearest Neighbor, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Support Vector Machine, Adaboost, LGBM classifier, Gradient Boosting, and XGB classifier. Three feature scaling used in machine learning are raw, minmax scaler, and standard scaler. Finally, you will develop a GUI using PyQt5 to plot cross validation score, predicted values versus true values, confusion matrix, learning curve, decision boundaries, performance of the model, scalability of the model, training loss, and training accuracy.

Book Data Science Using Python and R

Download or read book Data Science Using Python and R written by Daniel T. Larose and published by John Wiley & Sons. This book was released on 2019-03-21 with total page 256 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Learn data science by doing data science! Data Science Using Python and R will get you plugged into the world’s two most widespread open-source platforms for data science: Python and R. Data science is hot. Bloomberg called data scientist “the hottest job in America.” Python and R are the top two open-source data science tools in the world. In Data Science Using Python and R, you will learn step-by-step how to produce hands-on solutions to real-world business problems, using state-of-the-art techniques. Data Science Using Python and R is written for the general reader with no previous analytics or programming experience. An entire chapter is dedicated to learning the basics of Python and R. Then, each chapter presents step-by-step instructions and walkthroughs for solving data science problems using Python and R. Those with analytics experience will appreciate having a one-stop shop for learning how to do data science using Python and R. Topics covered include data preparation, exploratory data analysis, preparing to model the data, decision trees, model evaluation, misclassification costs, naïve Bayes classification, neural networks, clustering, regression modeling, dimension reduction, and association rules mining. Further, exciting new topics such as random forests and general linear models are also included. The book emphasizes data-driven error costs to enhance profitability, which avoids the common pitfalls that may cost a company millions of dollars. Data Science Using Python and R provides exercises at the end of every chapter, totaling over 500 exercises in the book. Readers will therefore have plenty of opportunity to test their newfound data science skills and expertise. In the Hands-on Analysis exercises, readers are challenged to solve interesting business problems using real-world data sets.

Book Data Science Projects with Python

Download or read book Data Science Projects with Python written by Stephen Klosterman and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2019-04-30 with total page 374 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Gain hands-on experience with industry-standard data analysis and machine learning tools in Python Key FeaturesTackle data science problems by identifying the problem to be solvedIllustrate patterns in data using appropriate visualizationsImplement suitable machine learning algorithms to gain insights from dataBook Description Data Science Projects with Python is designed to give you practical guidance on industry-standard data analysis and machine learning tools, by applying them to realistic data problems. You will learn how to use pandas and Matplotlib to critically examine datasets with summary statistics and graphs, and extract the insights you seek to derive. You will build your knowledge as you prepare data using the scikit-learn package and feed it to machine learning algorithms such as regularized logistic regression and random forest. You’ll discover how to tune algorithms to provide the most accurate predictions on new and unseen data. As you progress, you’ll gain insights into the working and output of these algorithms, building your understanding of both the predictive capabilities of the models and why they make these predictions. By then end of this book, you will have the necessary skills to confidently use machine learning algorithms to perform detailed data analysis and extract meaningful insights from unstructured data. What you will learnInstall the required packages to set up a data science coding environmentLoad data into a Jupyter notebook running PythonUse Matplotlib to create data visualizationsFit machine learning models using scikit-learnUse lasso and ridge regression to regularize your modelsCompare performance between models to find the best outcomesUse k-fold cross-validation to select model hyperparametersWho this book is for If you are a data analyst, data scientist, or business analyst who wants to get started using Python and machine learning techniques to analyze data and predict outcomes, this book is for you. Basic knowledge of Python and data analytics will help you get the most from this book. Familiarity with mathematical concepts such as algebra and basic statistics will also be useful.

Book DATA SCIENCE FOR GROCERIES MARKET ANALYSIS  CLUSTERING  AND PREDICTION WITH PYTHON GUI

Download or read book DATA SCIENCE FOR GROCERIES MARKET ANALYSIS CLUSTERING AND PREDICTION WITH PYTHON GUI written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2022-05-03 with total page 335 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The objective of this data science project is to analyze and predict customer behavior in the groceries market using Python and create a graphical user interface (GUI) using PyQt. The project encompasses various stages, starting from exploring the dataset and visualizing the distribution of features to RFM analysis, K-means clustering, predicting clusters with machine learning algorithms, and implementing a GUI for user interaction. The first step in this project involves exploring the dataset. We load the dataset containing information about customers' purchases in the groceries market and examine its structure. We check for missing values and perform data preprocessing if necessary, ensuring the dataset is ready for analysis. This initial exploration allows us to gain a better understanding of the data and its characteristics. Following the dataset exploration, we conduct exploratory data analysis (EDA). This step involves visualizing the distribution of different features within the dataset. By creating histograms, box plots, scatter plots, and other visualizations, we gain insights into the patterns, trends, and relationships within the data. EDA helps us identify outliers, understand feature distributions, and uncover potential correlations between variables. After the EDA phase, we move on to RFM analysis. RFM stands for Recency, Frequency, and Monetary analysis. In this step, we calculate three key metrics for each customer: recency (how recently a customer made a purchase), frequency (how often a customer made purchases), and monetary value (how much a customer spent). RFM analysis allows us to segment customers based on their purchasing behavior, identifying high-value customers and those who require re-engagement strategies. Once we have the clusters, we can utilize machine learning algorithms to predict the cluster for new or unseen customers. We train various models, including logistic regression, support vector machines, decision trees, k-nearest neighbors, random forests, gradient boosting, naive Bayes, adaboost, XGBoost, and LightGBM, on the clustered data. These models learn the patterns and relationships between customer features and their assigned clusters, enabling us to predict the cluster for new customers accurately. To evaluate the performance of our models, we utilize metrics such as accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score. These metrics allow us to measure the models' predictive capabilities and compare their performance across different algorithms and preprocessing techniques. By assessing the models' performance, we can select the most suitable model for cluster prediction in the groceries market analysis. In addition to the analysis and prediction components, this project aims to provide a user-friendly interface for interaction and visualization. To achieve this, we implement a GUI using PyQt, a Python library for creating desktop applications. The GUI allows users to input new customer data and predict the corresponding cluster based on the trained models. It provides visualizations of the analysis results, including cluster distributions, confusion matrices, and decision boundaries. The GUI allows users to select different machine learning models and preprocessing techniques through radio buttons or dropdown menus. This flexibility empowers users to explore and compare the performance of various models, enabling them to choose the most suitable approach for their specific needs. The GUI's interactive nature enhances the usability of the project and promotes effective decision-making based on the analysis results. In conclusion, this project combines data science methodologies, including dataset exploration, visualization, RFM analysis, K-means clustering, predictive modeling, and GUI implementation, to provide insights into customer behavior and enable accurate cluster prediction in the groceries market. By leveraging these techniques, businesses can enhance their marketing strategies, improve customer targeting and retention, and ultimately drive growth and profitability in a competitive market landscape. The project's emphasis on user interaction and visualization through the GUI ensures that businesses can easily access and interpret the analysis results, making informed decisions based on data-driven insights.

Book Data Science Bookcamp

    Book Details:
  • Author : Leonard Apeltsin
  • Publisher : Simon and Schuster
  • Release : 2021-12-07
  • ISBN : 1638352305
  • Pages : 702 pages

Download or read book Data Science Bookcamp written by Leonard Apeltsin and published by Simon and Schuster. This book was released on 2021-12-07 with total page 702 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Learn data science with Python by building five real-world projects! Experiment with card game predictions, tracking disease outbreaks, and more, as you build a flexible and intuitive understanding of data science. In Data Science Bookcamp you will learn: - Techniques for computing and plotting probabilities - Statistical analysis using Scipy - How to organize datasets with clustering algorithms - How to visualize complex multi-variable datasets - How to train a decision tree machine learning algorithm In Data Science Bookcamp you’ll test and build your knowledge of Python with the kind of open-ended problems that professional data scientists work on every day. Downloadable data sets and thoroughly-explained solutions help you lock in what you’ve learned, building your confidence and making you ready for an exciting new data science career. Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications. About the technology A data science project has a lot of moving parts, and it takes practice and skill to get all the code, algorithms, datasets, formats, and visualizations working together harmoniously. This unique book guides you through five realistic projects, including tracking disease outbreaks from news headlines, analyzing social networks, and finding relevant patterns in ad click data. About the book Data Science Bookcamp doesn’t stop with surface-level theory and toy examples. As you work through each project, you’ll learn how to troubleshoot common problems like missing data, messy data, and algorithms that don’t quite fit the model you’re building. You’ll appreciate the detailed setup instructions and the fully explained solutions that highlight common failure points. In the end, you’ll be confident in your skills because you can see the results. What's inside - Web scraping - Organize datasets with clustering algorithms - Visualize complex multi-variable datasets - Train a decision tree machine learning algorithm About the reader For readers who know the basics of Python. No prior data science or machine learning skills required. About the author Leonard Apeltsin is the Head of Data Science at Anomaly, where his team applies advanced analytics to uncover healthcare fraud, waste, and abuse. Table of Contents CASE STUDY 1 FINDING THE WINNING STRATEGY IN A CARD GAME 1 Computing probabilities using Python 2 Plotting probabilities using Matplotlib 3 Running random simulations in NumPy 4 Case study 1 solution CASE STUDY 2 ASSESSING ONLINE AD CLICKS FOR SIGNIFICANCE 5 Basic probability and statistical analysis using SciPy 6 Making predictions using the central limit theorem and SciPy 7 Statistical hypothesis testing 8 Analyzing tables using Pandas 9 Case study 2 solution CASE STUDY 3 TRACKING DISEASE OUTBREAKS USING NEWS HEADLINES 10 Clustering data into groups 11 Geographic location visualization and analysis 12 Case study 3 solution CASE STUDY 4 USING ONLINE JOB POSTINGS TO IMPROVE YOUR DATA SCIENCE RESUME 13 Measuring text similarities 14 Dimension reduction of matrix data 15 NLP analysis of large text datasets 16 Extracting text from web pages 17 Case study 4 solution CASE STUDY 5 PREDICTING FUTURE FRIENDSHIPS FROM SOCIAL NETWORK DATA 18 An introduction to graph theory and network analysis 19 Dynamic graph theory techniques for node ranking and social network analysis 20 Network-driven supervised machine learning 21 Training linear classifiers with logistic regression 22 Training nonlinear classifiers with decision tree techniques 23 Case study 5 solution

Book Practical Data Science Cookbook

Download or read book Practical Data Science Cookbook written by Prabhanjan Tattar and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2017-06-29 with total page 428 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Over 85 recipes to help you complete real-world data science projects in R and Python About This Book Tackle every step in the data science pipeline and use it to acquire, clean, analyze, and visualize your data Get beyond the theory and implement real-world projects in data science using R and Python Easy-to-follow recipes will help you understand and implement the numerical computing concepts Who This Book Is For If you are an aspiring data scientist who wants to learn data science and numerical programming concepts through hands-on, real-world project examples, this is the book for you. Whether you are brand new to data science or you are a seasoned expert, you will benefit from learning about the structure of real-world data science projects and the programming examples in R and Python. What You Will Learn Learn and understand the installation procedure and environment required for R and Python on various platforms Prepare data for analysis by implement various data science concepts such as acquisition, cleaning and munging through R and Python Build a predictive model and an exploratory model Analyze the results of your model and create reports on the acquired data Build various tree-based methods and Build random forest In Detail As increasing amounts of data are generated each year, the need to analyze and create value out of it is more important than ever. Companies that know what to do with their data and how to do it well will have a competitive advantage over companies that don't. Because of this, there will be an increasing demand for people that possess both the analytical and technical abilities to extract valuable insights from data and create valuable solutions that put those insights to use. Starting with the basics, this book covers how to set up your numerical programming environment, introduces you to the data science pipeline, and guides you through several data projects in a step-by-step format. By sequentially working through the steps in each chapter, you will quickly familiarize yourself with the process and learn how to apply it to a variety of situations with examples using the two most popular programming languages for data analysis—R and Python. Style and approach This step-by-step guide to data science is full of hands-on examples of real-world data science tasks. Each recipe focuses on a particular task involved in the data science pipeline, ranging from readying the dataset to analytics and visualization

Book Python  Data Analytics and Visualization

Download or read book Python Data Analytics and Visualization written by Phuong Vo.T.H and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2017-03-31 with total page 866 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Understand, evaluate, and visualize data About This Book Learn basic steps of data analysis and how to use Python and its packages A step-by-step guide to predictive modeling including tips, tricks, and best practices Effectively visualize a broad set of analyzed data and generate effective results Who This Book Is For This book is for Python Developers who are keen to get into data analysis and wish to visualize their analyzed data in a more efficient and insightful manner. What You Will Learn Get acquainted with NumPy and use arrays and array-oriented computing in data analysis Process and analyze data using the time-series capabilities of Pandas Understand the statistical and mathematical concepts behind predictive analytics algorithms Data visualization with Matplotlib Interactive plotting with NumPy, Scipy, and MKL functions Build financial models using Monte-Carlo simulations Create directed graphs and multi-graphs Advanced visualization with D3 In Detail You will start the course with an introduction to the principles of data analysis and supported libraries, along with NumPy basics for statistics and data processing. Next, you will overview the Pandas package and use its powerful features to solve data-processing problems. Moving on, you will get a brief overview of the Matplotlib API .Next, you will learn to manipulate time and data structures, and load and store data in a file or database using Python packages. You will learn how to apply powerful packages in Python to process raw data into pure and helpful data using examples. You will also get a brief overview of machine learning algorithms, that is, applying data analysis results to make decisions or building helpful products such as recommendations and predictions using Scikit-learn. After this, you will move on to a data analytics specialization—predictive analytics. Social media and IOT have resulted in an avalanche of data. You will get started with predictive analytics using Python. You will see how to create predictive models from data. You will get balanced information on statistical and mathematical concepts, and implement them in Python using libraries such as Pandas, scikit-learn, and NumPy. You'll learn more about the best predictive modeling algorithms such as Linear Regression, Decision Tree, and Logistic Regression. Finally, you will master best practices in predictive modeling. After this, you will get all the practical guidance you need to help you on the journey to effective data visualization. Starting with a chapter on data frameworks, which explains the transformation of data into information and eventually knowledge, this path subsequently cover the complete visualization process using the most popular Python libraries with working examples This Learning Path combines some of the best that Packt has to offer in one complete, curated package. It includes content from the following Packt products: Getting Started with Python Data Analysis, Phuong Vo.T.H &Martin Czygan Learning Predictive Analytics with Python, Ashish Kumar Mastering Python Data Visualization, Kirthi Raman Style and approach The course acts as a step-by-step guide to get you familiar with data analysis and the libraries supported by Python with the help of real-world examples and datasets. It also helps you gain practical insights into predictive modeling by implementing predictive-analytics algorithms on public datasets with Python. The course offers a wealth of practical guidance to help you on this journey to data visualization

Book Hands On Predictive Analytics with Python

Download or read book Hands On Predictive Analytics with Python written by Alvaro Fuentes and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2018-12-28 with total page 320 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Step-by-step guide to build high performing predictive applications Key FeaturesUse the Python data analytics ecosystem to implement end-to-end predictive analytics projectsExplore advanced predictive modeling algorithms with an emphasis on theory with intuitive explanationsLearn to deploy a predictive model's results as an interactive applicationBook Description Predictive analytics is an applied field that employs a variety of quantitative methods using data to make predictions. It involves much more than just throwing data onto a computer to build a model. This book provides practical coverage to help you understand the most important concepts of predictive analytics. Using practical, step-by-step examples, we build predictive analytics solutions while using cutting-edge Python tools and packages. The book's step-by-step approach starts by defining the problem and moves on to identifying relevant data. We will also be performing data preparation, exploring and visualizing relationships, building models, tuning, evaluating, and deploying model. Each stage has relevant practical examples and efficient Python code. You will work with models such as KNN, Random Forests, and neural networks using the most important libraries in Python's data science stack: NumPy, Pandas, Matplotlib, Seaborn, Keras, Dash, and so on. In addition to hands-on code examples, you will find intuitive explanations of the inner workings of the main techniques and algorithms used in predictive analytics. By the end of this book, you will be all set to build high-performance predictive analytics solutions using Python programming. What you will learnGet to grips with the main concepts and principles of predictive analyticsLearn about the stages involved in producing complete predictive analytics solutionsUnderstand how to define a problem, propose a solution, and prepare a datasetUse visualizations to explore relationships and gain insights into the datasetLearn to build regression and classification models using scikit-learnUse Keras to build powerful neural network models that produce accurate predictionsLearn to serve a model's predictions as a web applicationWho this book is for This book is for data analysts, data scientists, data engineers, and Python developers who want to learn about predictive modeling and would like to implement predictive analytics solutions using Python's data stack. People from other backgrounds who would like to enter this exciting field will greatly benefit from reading this book. All you need is to be proficient in Python programming and have a basic understanding of statistics and college-level algebra.

Book DATA VISUALIZATION  TIME SERIES FORECASTING  AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH TKINTER

Download or read book DATA VISUALIZATION TIME SERIES FORECASTING AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH TKINTER written by Vivian Siahaan and published by BALIGE PUBLISHING. This book was released on 2023-09-06 with total page 267 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This "Data Visualization, Time-Series Forecasting, and Prediction using Machine Learning with Tkinter" project is a comprehensive and multifaceted application that leverages data visualization, time-series forecasting, and machine learning techniques to gain insights into bitcoin data and make predictions. This project serves as a valuable tool for financial analysts, traders, and investors seeking to make informed decisions in the stock market. The project begins with data visualization, where historical bitcoin market data is visually represented using various plots and charts. This provides users with an intuitive understanding of the data's trends, patterns, and fluctuations. Features distribution analysis is conducted to assess the statistical properties of the dataset, helping users identify key characteristics that may impact forecasting and prediction. One of the project's core functionalities is time-series forecasting. Through a user-friendly interface built with Tkinter, users can select a stock symbol and specify the time horizon for forecasting. The project supports multiple machine learning regressors, such as Linear Regression, Decision Trees, Random Forests, Gradient Boosting, Extreme Gradient Boosting, Multi-Layer Perceptron, Lasso, Ridge, AdaBoost, and KNN, allowing users to choose the most suitable algorithm for their forecasting needs. Time-series forecasting is crucial for making predictions about stock prices, which is essential for investment strategies. The project employs various machine learning regressors to predict the adjusted closing price of bitcoin stock. By training these models on historical data, users can obtain predictions for future adjusted closing prices. This information is invaluable for traders and investors looking to make buy or sell decisions. The project also incorporates hyperparameter tuning and cross-validation to enhance the accuracy of these predictions. These models employ metrics such as Mean Absolute Error (MAE), which quantifies the average absolute discrepancy between predicted values and actual values. Lower MAE values signify superior model performance. Additionally, Mean Squared Error (MSE) is used to calculate the average squared differences between predicted and actual values, with lower MSE values indicating better model performance. Root Mean Squared Error (RMSE), derived from MSE, provides insights in the same units as the target variable and is valued for its lower values, denoting superior performance. Lastly, R-squared (R2) evaluates the fraction of variance in the target variable that can be predicted from independent variables, with higher values signifying better model fit. An R2 of 1 implies a perfect model fit. In addition to close price forecasting, the project extends its capabilities to predict daily returns. By implementing grid search, users can fine-tune the hyperparameters of machine learning models such as Random Forests, Gradient Boosting, Support Vector, Decision Tree, Gradient Boosting, Extreme Gradient Boosting, Multi-Layer Perceptron, and AdaBoost Classifiers. This optimization process aims to maximize the predictive accuracy of daily returns. Accurate daily return predictions are essential for assessing risk and formulating effective trading strategies. Key metrics in these classifiers encompass Accuracy, which represents the ratio of correctly predicted instances to the total number of instances, Precision, which measures the proportion of true positive predictions among all positive predictions, and Recall (also known as Sensitivity or True Positive Rate), which assesses the proportion of true positive predictions among all actual positive instances. The F1-Score serves as the harmonic mean of Precision and Recall, offering a balanced evaluation, especially when considering the trade-off between false positives and false negatives. The ROC Curve illustrates the trade-off between Recall and False Positive Rate, while the Area Under the ROC Curve (AUC-ROC) summarizes this trade-off. The Confusion Matrix provides a comprehensive view of classifier performance by detailing true positives, true negatives, false positives, and false negatives, facilitating the computation of various metrics like accuracy, precision, and recall. The selection of these metrics hinges on the project's specific objectives and the characteristics of the dataset, ensuring alignment with the intended goals and the ramifications of false positives and false negatives, which hold particular significance in financial contexts where decisions can have profound consequences. Overall, the "Data Visualization, Time-Series Forecasting, and Prediction using Machine Learning with Tkinter" project serves as a powerful and user-friendly platform for financial data analysis and decision-making. It bridges the gap between complex machine learning techniques and accessible user interfaces, making financial analysis and prediction more accessible to a broader audience. With its comprehensive features, this project empowers users to gain insights from historical data, make informed investment decisions, and develop effective trading strategies in the dynamic world of finance. You can download the dataset from: http://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/09/data-visualization-time-series.html.

Book Data Science with Python and Dask

Download or read book Data Science with Python and Dask written by Jesse Daniel and published by Simon and Schuster. This book was released on 2019-07-08 with total page 379 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Summary Dask is a native parallel analytics tool designed to integrate seamlessly with the libraries you're already using, including Pandas, NumPy, and Scikit-Learn. With Dask you can crunch and work with huge datasets, using the tools you already have. And Data Science with Python and Dask is your guide to using Dask for your data projects without changing the way you work! Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF, Kindle, and ePub formats from Manning Publications. You'll find registration instructions inside the print book. About the Technology An efficient data pipeline means everything for the success of a data science project. Dask is a flexible library for parallel computing in Python that makes it easy to build intuitive workflows for ingesting and analyzing large, distributed datasets. Dask provides dynamic task scheduling and parallel collections that extend the functionality of NumPy, Pandas, and Scikit-learn, enabling users to scale their code from a single laptop to a cluster of hundreds of machines with ease. About the Book Data Science with Python and Dask teaches you to build scalable projects that can handle massive datasets. After meeting the Dask framework, you'll analyze data in the NYC Parking Ticket database and use DataFrames to streamline your process. Then, you'll create machine learning models using Dask-ML, build interactive visualizations, and build clusters using AWS and Docker. What's inside Working with large, structured and unstructured datasets Visualization with Seaborn and Datashader Implementing your own algorithms Building distributed apps with Dask Distributed Packaging and deploying Dask apps About the Reader For data scientists and developers with experience using Python and the PyData stack. About the Author Jesse Daniel is an experienced Python developer. He taught Python for Data Science at the University of Denver and leads a team of data scientists at a Denver-based media technology company. Table of Contents PART 1 - The Building Blocks of scalable computing Why scalable computing matters Introducing Dask PART 2 - Working with Structured Data using Dask DataFrames Introducing Dask DataFrames Loading data into DataFrames Cleaning and transforming DataFrames Summarizing and analyzing DataFrames Visualizing DataFrames with Seaborn Visualizing location data with Datashader PART 3 - Extending and deploying Dask Working with Bags and Arrays Machine learning with Dask-ML Scaling and deploying Dask

Book Applied Data Science with Python and Jupyter

Download or read book Applied Data Science with Python and Jupyter written by Alex Galea and published by Packt Publishing Ltd. This book was released on 2018-10-31 with total page 192 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Become the master player of data exploration by creating reproducible data processing pipelines, visualizations, and prediction models for your applications. Key FeaturesGet up and running with the Jupyter ecosystem and some example datasetsLearn about key machine learning concepts such as SVM, KNN classifiers, and Random ForestsDiscover how you can use web scraping to gather and parse your own bespoke datasetsBook Description Getting started with data science doesn't have to be an uphill battle. Applied Data Science with Python and Jupyter is a step-by-step guide ideal for beginners who know a little Python and are looking for a quick, fast-paced introduction to these concepts. In this book, you'll learn every aspect of the standard data workflow process, including collecting, cleaning, investigating, visualizing, and modeling data. You'll start with the basics of Jupyter, which will be the backbone of the book. After familiarizing ourselves with its standard features, you'll look at an example of it in practice with our first analysis. In the next lesson, you dive right into predictive analytics, where multiple classification algorithms are implemented. Finally, the book ends by looking at data collection techniques. You'll see how web data can be acquired with scraping techniques and via APIs, and then briefly explore interactive visualizations. What you will learnGet up and running with the Jupyter ecosystemIdentify potential areas of investigation and perform exploratory data analysisPlan a machine learning classification strategy and train classification modelsUse validation curves and dimensionality reduction to tune and enhance your modelsScrape tabular data from web pages and transform it into Pandas DataFramesCreate interactive, web-friendly visualizations to clearly communicate your findingsWho this book is for Applied Data Science with Python and Jupyter is ideal for professionals with a variety of job descriptions across a large range of industries, given the rising popularity and accessibility of data science. You'll need some prior experience with Python, with any prior work with libraries such as Pandas, Matplotlib, and Pandas providing you a useful head start.