In this vignette we present an
example of an application of the rSAFE
package in case of
regression problems. It is based on apartments
and
apartmentsTest
datasets which come from the
DALEX
package but are also available in the
rSAFE
package. We will use these artificial datasets to
predict the price per square meter of an apartment based on features
such as construction year, surface, floor, number of rooms and district.
It should be mentioned that four of these variables are continuous while
the fifth one is categorical.
library(rSAFE)
head(apartments)
#> m2.price construction.year surface floor no.rooms district
#> 1 5897 1953 25 3 1 Srodmiescie
#> 2 1818 1992 143 9 5 Bielany
#> 3 3643 1937 56 1 2 Praga
#> 4 3517 1995 93 7 3 Ochota
#> 5 3013 1992 144 6 5 Mokotow
#> 6 5795 1926 61 6 2 Srodmiescie
First we fit a random forest model to the original
apartments
dataset - this is our complex model that will
serve us as a surrogate.
We also create an explainer
object that will be used
later to create new variables and at the end to compare models
performance.
library(DALEX)
explainer_rf1 <- explain(model_rf1, data = apartmentsTest[1:3000,2:6], y = apartmentsTest[1:3000,1], label = "rf1", verbose = FALSE)
explainer_rf1
#> Model label: rf1
#> Model class: randomForest.formula,randomForest
#> Data head :
#> construction.year surface floor no.rooms district
#> 1001 1976 131 3 5 Srodmiescie
#> 1002 1978 112 9 4 Mokotow
Now, we create a safe_extractor
object using
rSAFE
package and our surrogate model. Setting the argument
verbose=FALSE
stops progress bar from printing.
Now, let’s print summary for the new object we have just created.
print(safe_extractor)
#> Variable 'construction.year' - selected intervals:
#> (-Inf, 1937]
#> (1937, 1992]
#> (1992, Inf)
#> Variable 'surface' - selected intervals:
#> (-Inf, 47]
#> (47, 101]
#> (101, Inf)
#> Variable 'floor' - selected intervals:
#> (-Inf, 5]
#> (5, Inf)
#> Variable 'no.rooms' - selected intervals:
#> (-Inf, 3]
#> (3, Inf)
#> Variable 'district' - created levels:
#> Bemowo, Bielany, Ursus, Ursynow, Praga, Wola -> Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola
#> Zoliborz, Mokotow, Ochota -> Mokotow_Ochota_Zoliborz
#> Srodmiescie -> Srodmiescie
We can see transformation propositions for all variables in our dataset.
In the plot below we can see which points have been chosen to be the breakpoints for a particular variable:
For factor variables we can observe in which order levels have been merged and what is the optimal clustering:
Now we can use our safe_extractor
object to create new
categorical features in the given dataset.
district | m2.price | construction.year | surface | floor | no.rooms | construction.year_new | surface_new | floor_new | no.rooms_new | district_new |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bielany | 3542 | 1979 | 21 | 6 | 1 | (1937, 1992] | (-Inf, 47] | (5, Inf) | (-Inf, 3] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
Srodmiescie | 5631 | 1997 | 107 | 2 | 4 | (1992, Inf) | (101, Inf) | (-Inf, 5] | (3, Inf) | Srodmiescie |
Bielany | 2989 | 1994 | 41 | 9 | 2 | (1992, Inf) | (-Inf, 47] | (5, Inf) | (-Inf, 3] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
Ursynow | 3822 | 1968 | 28 | 2 | 2 | (1937, 1992] | (-Inf, 47] | (-Inf, 5] | (-Inf, 3] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
Ursynow | 2337 | 1971 | 146 | 3 | 6 | (1937, 1992] | (101, Inf) | (-Inf, 5] | (3, Inf) | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
Ochota | 3381 | 1956 | 97 | 8 | 3 | (1937, 1992] | (47, 101] | (5, Inf) | (-Inf, 3] | Mokotow_Ochota_Zoliborz |
We can also perform feature selection if we wish. For each original feature it keeps exactly one of their forms - original one or transformed one.
vars <- safely_select_variables(safe_extractor, data1, which_y = "m2.price", verbose = FALSE)
data1 <- data1[,c("m2.price", vars)]
print(vars)
#> [1] "surface" "floor" "no.rooms"
#> [4] "construction.year_new" "district_new"
It can be observed that for some features the original form was preferred and for others the transformed one.
Here are the first few rows for our data after feature selection:
m2.price | surface | floor | no.rooms | construction.year_new | district_new |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3542 | 21 | 6 | 1 | (1937, 1992] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
5631 | 107 | 2 | 4 | (1992, Inf) | Srodmiescie |
2989 | 41 | 9 | 2 | (1992, Inf) | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
3822 | 28 | 2 | 2 | (1937, 1992] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
2337 | 146 | 3 | 6 | (1937, 1992] | Bemowo_Bielany_Praga_Ursus_Ursynow_Wola |
3381 | 97 | 8 | 3 | (1937, 1992] | Mokotow_Ochota_Zoliborz |
Now, we perform transformations on another data that will be used later in explainers.
Let’s fit the models to data containing newly created columns. We consider a linear model as a white-box model.
model_lm2 <- lm(m2.price ~ ., data = data1)
explainer_lm2 <- explain(model_lm2, data = data2, y = apartmentsTest[6001:9000,1], label = "lm2", verbose = FALSE)
set.seed(111)
model_rf2 <- randomForest(m2.price ~ ., data = data1)
explainer_rf2 <- explain(model_rf2, data2, apartmentsTest[6001:9000,1], label = "rf2", verbose = FALSE)
Moreover, we create a linear model based on original
apartments
dataset and its corresponding explainer in order
to check if our methodology improves results.
Final step is the comparison of all the models we have created.
mp_lm1 <- model_performance(explainer_lm1)
mp_rf1 <- model_performance(explainer_rf1)
mp_lm2 <- model_performance(explainer_lm2)
mp_rf2 <- model_performance(explainer_rf2)
In the plot above we can see that the linear model based on transformed features has generally more accurate predictions that the one fitted to the original dataset.