Welcome to the third project of the Machine Learning Engineer Nanodegree! In this notebook, some template code has already been provided for you, and it will be your job to implement the additional functionality necessary to successfully complete this project. Sections that begin with 'Implementation' in the header indicate that the following block of code will require additional functionality which you must provide. Instructions will be provided for each section and the specifics of the implementation are marked in the code block with a 'TODO'
statement. Please be sure to read the instructions carefully!
In addition to implementing code, there will be questions that you must answer which relate to the project and your implementation. Each section where you will answer a question is preceded by a 'Question X' header. Carefully read each question and provide thorough answers in the following text boxes that begin with 'Answer:'. Your project submission will be evaluated based on your answers to each of the questions and the implementation you provide.
Note: Code and Markdown cells can be executed using the Shift + Enter keyboard shortcut. In addition, Markdown cells can be edited by typically double-clicking the cell to enter edit mode.
In this project, you will analyze a dataset containing data on various customers' annual spending amounts (reported in monetary units) of diverse product categories for internal structure. One goal of this project is to best describe the variation in the different types of customers that a wholesale distributor interacts with. Doing so would equip the distributor with insight into how to best structure their delivery service to meet the needs of each customer.
The dataset for this project can be found on the UCI Machine Learning Repository. For the purposes of this project, the features 'Channel'
and 'Region'
will be excluded in the analysis — with focus instead on the six product categories recorded for customers.
Run the code block below to load the wholesale customers dataset, along with a few of the necessary Python libraries required for this project. You will know the dataset loaded successfully if the size of the dataset is reported.
In [1]:
# Import libraries necessary for this project
import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
import renders as rs
from IPython.display import display # Allows the use of display() for DataFrames
# Show matplotlib plots inline (nicely formatted in the notebook)
%matplotlib inline
# Load the wholesale customers dataset
try:
data = pd.read_csv("customers.csv")
data.drop(['Region', 'Channel'], axis = 1, inplace = True)
print "Wholesale customers dataset has {} samples with {} features each.".format(*data.shape)
except:
print "Dataset could not be loaded. Is the dataset missing?"
In this section, you will begin exploring the data through visualizations and code to understand how each feature is related to the others. You will observe a statistical description of the dataset, consider the relevance of each feature, and select a few sample data points from the dataset which you will track through the course of this project.
Run the code block below to observe a statistical description of the dataset. Note that the dataset is composed of six important product categories: 'Fresh', 'Milk', 'Grocery', 'Frozen', 'Detergents_Paper', and 'Delicatessen'. Consider what each category represents in terms of products you could purchase.
In [2]:
# Display a description of the dataset
display(data.describe())
To get a better understanding of the customers and how their data will transform through the analysis, it would be best to select a few sample data points and explore them in more detail. In the code block below, add three indices of your choice to the indices
list which will represent the customers to track. It is suggested to try different sets of samples until you obtain customers that vary significantly from one another.
In [3]:
# TODO: Select three indices of your choice you wish to sample from the dataset
indices = [0, 15, 45]
# Create a DataFrame of the chosen samples
samples = pd.DataFrame(data.loc[indices], columns = data.keys()).reset_index(drop = True)
print "Chosen samples of wholesale customers dataset:"
display(samples)
Consider the total purchase cost of each product category and the statistical description of the dataset above for your sample customers.
What kind of establishment (customer) could each of the three samples you've chosen represent?
Hint: Examples of establishments include places like markets, cafes, and retailers, among many others. Avoid using names for establishments, such as saying "McDonalds" when describing a sample customer as a restaurant.
Answer: Customer 0 - Seems to be a cafe or restaurant given higher than average consumption of Milk and grocery and lower consumption for other products.
Customer 15 - Only product which is near the mean for this customer is "Fresh". In general there is low consumption for almost all other products (nearing 50 percentile). This customer is probably a small grocery shop.
Customer 45 - Very high comsumption of Milk, groceries and detergents above average points to this is probably a big restaurant or Bakery.
One interesting thought to consider is if one (or more) of the six product categories is actually relevant for understanding customer purchasing. That is to say, is it possible to determine whether customers purchasing some amount of one category of products will necessarily purchase some proportional amount of another category of products? We can make this determination quite easily by training a supervised regression learner on a subset of the data with one feature removed, and then score how well that model can predict the removed feature.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
new_data
a copy of the data by removing a feature of your choice using the DataFrame.drop
function.sklearn.cross_validation.train_test_split
to split the dataset into training and testing sets.test_size
of 0.25
and set a random_state
.random_state
, and fit the learner to the training data.score
function.
In [4]:
# TODO: Make a copy of the DataFrame, using the 'drop' function to drop the given feature
new_data = data.drop('Detergents_Paper',axis=1)
# TODO: Split the data into training and testing sets using the given feature as the target
from sklearn.cross_validation import train_test_split
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(new_data, data['Detergents_Paper'], test_size = 0.25, random_state = 0)
# TODO: Create a decision tree regressor and fit it to the training set
from sklearn.tree import DecisionTreeRegressor
regressor = DecisionTreeRegressor()
# TODO: Report the score of the prediction using the testing set
from sklearn.metrics import r2_score
model = regressor.fit(X_train,y_train)
score = r2_score(y_test, model.predict(X_test))
print (score)
Which feature did you attempt to predict? What was the reported prediction score? Is this feature is necessary for identifying customers' spending habits?
Hint: The coefficient of determination, R^2
, is scored between 0 and 1, with 1 being a perfect fit. A negative R^2
implies the model fails to fit the data.
Answer: I chose Deteregents_Paper for prediction. The R^2 score achieved was 0.67 which shows that this feature is dependent on some (non-linear) combination of other features. Since this feature is not independent of other features, this feature may not provide unique information about customer's spending habits.
To get a better understanding of the dataset, we can construct a scatter matrix of each of the six product features present in the data. If you found that the feature you attempted to predict above is relevant for identifying a specific customer, then the scatter matrix below may not show any correlation between that feature and the others. Conversely, if you believe that feature is not relevant for identifying a specific customer, the scatter matrix might show a correlation between that feature and another feature in the data. Run the code block below to produce a scatter matrix.
In [5]:
# Produce a scatter matrix for each pair of features in the data
pd.scatter_matrix(data, alpha = 0.3, figsize = (14,8), diagonal = 'kde');
Are there any pairs of features which exhibit some degree of correlation? Does this confirm or deny your suspicions about the relevance of the feature you attempted to predict? How is the data for those features distributed?
Hint: Is the data normally distributed? Where do most of the data points lie?
Answer: Above figure shows a strong correlation between Detergent_Paper and Grocery. Also, there is a weaker correlation between Milk and Detergent_Paper, Milk and Grocery. This infact confirms my suspicion of Detergent_Paper being dependent on other features.
The data is definetly not normally distirbuted and most of it is cluttered near the origin.
In this section, you will preprocess the data to create a better representation of customers by performing a scaling on the data and detecting (and optionally removing) outliers. Preprocessing data is often times a critical step in assuring that results you obtain from your analysis are significant and meaningful.
If data is not normally distributed, especially if the mean and median vary significantly (indicating a large skew), it is most often appropriate to apply a non-linear scaling — particularly for financial data. One way to achieve this scaling is by using a Box-Cox test, which calculates the best power transformation of the data that reduces skewness. A simpler approach which can work in most cases would be applying the natural logarithm.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
log_data
after applying a logarithm scaling. Use the np.log
function for this.log_samples
after applying a logrithm scaling. Again, use np.log
.
In [6]:
# TODO: Scale the data using the natural logarithm
log_data = np.log(data)
# TODO: Scale the sample data using the natural logarithm
log_samples = np.log(samples)
# Produce a scatter matrix for each pair of newly-transformed features
pd.scatter_matrix(log_data, alpha = 0.3, figsize = (14,8), diagonal = 'kde');
After applying a natural logarithm scaling to the data, the distribution of each feature should appear much more normal. For any pairs of features you may have identified earlier as being correlated, observe here whether that correlation is still present (and whether it is now stronger or weaker than before).
Run the code below to see how the sample data has changed after having the natural logarithm applied to it.
In [7]:
# Display the log-transformed sample data
display(log_samples)
Detecting outliers in the data is extremely important in the data preprocessing step of any analysis. The presence of outliers can often skew results which take into consideration these data points. There are many "rules of thumb" for what constitutes an outlier in a dataset. Here, we will use Tukey's Method for identfying outliers: An outlier step is calculated as 1.5 times the interquartile range (IQR). A data point with a feature that is beyond an outlier step outside of the IQR for that feature is considered abnormal.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
Q1
. Use np.percentile
for this.Q3
. Again, use np.percentile
.step
.outliers
list.NOTE: If you choose to remove any outliers, ensure that the sample data does not contain any of these points!
Once you have performed this implementation, the dataset will be stored in the variable good_data
.
In [8]:
from sets import Set
outliers_indices = {}
# For each feature find the data points with extreme high or low values
for feature in log_data.keys():
# TODO: Calculate Q1 (25th percentile of the data) for the given feature
Q1 = np.percentile(log_data[feature], 25)
# TODO: Calculate Q3 (75th percentile of the data) for the given feature
Q3 = np.percentile(log_data[feature], 75)
# TODO: Use the interquartile range to calculate an outlier step (1.5 times the interquartile range)
step = 1.5 * (Q3 - Q1)
# Display the outliers
print "Data points considered outliers for the feature '{}':".format(feature)
outlier = log_data[~((log_data[feature] >= Q1 - step) & (log_data[feature] <= Q3 + step))]
outliers_indices[feature] = Set(outlier.index)
display(outlier)
# Find outlier in all the Feature
consistent_outliers = Set(outliers_indices['Fresh'])
for feature in outliers_indices.keys():
consistent_outliers.intersection_update(feature)
#print ("Outlier in all of the features: " + str(consistent_outliers))
# Create histogram for outliers => map of customer index to num of outlier features
hist_outliers = {}
for feature in outliers_indices.keys():
for idx in outliers_indices[feature]:
hist_outliers[idx] = hist_outliers[idx] + 1 if idx in hist_outliers.keys() else 1
# Find out liers in more than one feature
twice_outliers = [key for key,item in hist_outliers.iteritems() if item > 1]
# print twice_outliers
# OPTIONAL: Select the indices for data points you wish to remove
outliers = twice_outliers
# Remove the outliers, if any were specified
good_data = log_data.drop(log_data.index[outliers]).reset_index(drop = True)
Answer: Datapoints which were outliers in the more than one feature should be considered outliers. Such points have been assigned to outliers and hence have been removed from dataset. There is no datapoint which is outlier in all the features.
In this section you will use principal component analysis (PCA) to draw conclusions about the underlying structure of the wholesale customer data. Since using PCA on a dataset calculates the dimensions which best maximize variance, we will find which compound combinations of features best describe customers.
Now that the data has been scaled to a more normal distribution and has had any necessary outliers removed, we can now apply PCA to the good_data
to discover which dimensions about the data best maximize the variance of features involved. In addition to finding these dimensions, PCA will also report the explained variance ratio of each dimension — how much variance within the data is explained by that dimension alone. Note that a component (dimension) from PCA can be considered a new "feature" of the space, however it is a composition of the original features present in the data.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
sklearn.decomposition.PCA
and assign the results of fitting PCA in six dimensions with good_data
to pca
.log_samples
using pca.transform
, and assign the results to pca_samples
.
In [9]:
# TODO: Apply PCA by fitting the good data with the same number of dimensions as features
from sklearn.decomposition import PCA
pca = PCA(n_components=6)
pca.fit(good_data)
# TODO: Transform the sample log-data using the PCA fit above
pca_samples = pca.transform(log_samples)
# Generate PCA results plot
pca_results = rs.pca_results(good_data, pca)
print pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum()
How much variance in the data is explained in total by the first and second principal component? What about the first four principal components? Using the visualization provided above, discuss what the first four dimensions best represent in terms of customer spending.
Hint: A positive increase in a specific dimension corresponds with an increase of the positive-weighted features and a decrease of the negative-weighted features. The rate of increase or decrease is based on the indivdual feature weights.
Answer: As shown above, approx 44% and 70% resp. is explained by the first and second principle component. First four components together explains approx 93% of data.
Dim 1 - The prevalant components in this dim are Milk Grocery and Detergents_paper. This makes sense as the visualizations in the scatter matrix showed the strong pair-wise dependence in these three components.
Dim 2 - Fresh, Frozen, and delicatessen are most prominent components in this dim. which did not show the correlation with the components of first dim in scatter matrix.
Dim 3 - Fresh and Delicatessen seem to be major components here capturing the negative correlation.
Dim 4 - This dim shows negative correlation in frozen and Delicatessen components.
Run the code below to see how the log-transformed sample data has changed after having a PCA transformation applied to it in six dimensions. Observe the numerical value for the first four dimensions of the sample points. Consider if this is consistent with your initial interpretation of the sample points.
In [10]:
# Display sample log-data after having a PCA transformation applied
display(pd.DataFrame(np.round(pca_samples, 4), columns = pca_results.index.values))
When using principal component analysis, one of the main goals is to reduce the dimensionality of the data — in effect, reducing the complexity of the problem. Dimensionality reduction comes at a cost: Fewer dimensions used implies less of the total variance in the data is being explained. Because of this, the cumulative explained variance ratio is extremely important for knowing how many dimensions are necessary for the problem. Additionally, if a signifiant amount of variance is explained by only two or three dimensions, the reduced data can be visualized afterwards.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
good_data
to pca
.good_data
using pca.transform
, and assign the reuslts to reduced_data
.log_samples
using pca.transform
, and assign the results to pca_samples
.
In [11]:
# TODO: Apply PCA by fitting the good data with only two dimensions
pca = PCA(n_components=2).fit(good_data)
# TODO: Transform the good data using the PCA fit above
reduced_data = pca.transform(good_data)
# TODO: Transform the sample log-data using the PCA fit above
pca_samples = pca.transform(log_samples)
# Create a DataFrame for the reduced data
reduced_data = pd.DataFrame(reduced_data, columns = ['Dimension 1', 'Dimension 2'])
In [12]:
# Display sample log-data after applying PCA transformation in two dimensions
display(pd.DataFrame(np.round(pca_samples, 4), columns = ['Dimension 1', 'Dimension 2']))
In this section, you will choose to use either a K-Means clustering algorithm or a Gaussian Mixture Model clustering algorithm to identify the various customer segments hidden in the data. You will then recover specific data points from the clusters to understand their significance by transforming them back into their original dimension and scale.
Answer: Major advantage of K-means clustering is that it is converges quite fast as compared to other clustering algorithms. However K means is ameneable to getting stuck in local minima.
Gaussian Mixture model is generalization of K-means clustering. It does not need to assign hard clusters to the data-points and hence can have a probablistic association of a data point to clusters.
Since we need to find appropriate number of clusters here, we need to experiment multiple times with different number of clusters, I will use faster and clearer K-means clustering algo.
Depending on the problem, the number of clusters that you expect to be in the data may already be known. When the number of clusters is not known a priori, there is no guarantee that a given number of clusters best segments the data, since it is unclear what structure exists in the data — if any. However, we can quantify the "goodness" of a clustering by calculating each data point's silhouette coefficient. The silhouette coefficient for a data point measures how similar it is to its assigned cluster from -1 (dissimilar) to 1 (similar). Calculating the mean silhouette coefficient provides for a simple scoring method of a given clustering.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
reduced_data
and assign it to clusterer
.reduced_data
using clusterer.predict
and assign them to preds
.centers
.pca_samples
and assign them sample_preds
.reduced_data
against preds
.score
and print the result.
In [13]:
scores = []
# TODO: Apply your clustering algorithm of choice to the reduced data
for num_clusters in range(2,15):
from sklearn.cluster import KMeans
clusterer = KMeans(n_clusters=num_clusters).fit(reduced_data)
# TODO: Predict the cluster for each data point
preds = clusterer.predict(reduced_data)
# TODO: Find the cluster centers
centers = clusterer.cluster_centers_
# TODO: Predict the cluster for each transformed sample data point
sample_preds = clusterer.predict(pca_samples)
# TODO: Calculate the mean silhouette coefficient for the number of clusters chosen
from sklearn.metrics import silhouette_score
score = silhouette_score(reduced_data, preds)
scores.append(score)
scores_series = pd.Series(scores, index = range(2,15))
In [14]:
print scores_series.argmax()
In [15]:
%matplotlib inline
#import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
#plt.bar(range(len(scores)),scores)
score_df = pd.DataFrame(np.array(scores), index=range(2,15), columns= {"Scores"})
score_df.plot(kind='bar')
print score_df
In [16]:
# Use K=2
from sklearn.cluster import KMeans
clusterer = KMeans(n_clusters=2).fit(reduced_data)
preds = clusterer.predict(reduced_data)
centers = clusterer.cluster_centers_
sample_preds = clusterer.predict(pca_samples)
Answer: I tried the cluster numbers from 2 to 14 as shown above. The best silhoutte score is reported from K=2.
Once you've chosen the optimal number of clusters for your clustering algorithm using the scoring metric above, you can now visualize the results by executing the code block below. Note that, for experimentation purposes, you are welcome to adjust the number of clusters for your clustering algorithm to see various visualizations. The final visualization provided should, however, correspond with the optimal number of clusters.
In [17]:
# Display the results of the clustering from implementation
rs.cluster_results(reduced_data, preds, centers, pca_samples)
Each cluster present in the visualization above has a central point. These centers (or means) are not specifically data points from the data, but rather the averages of all the data points predicted in the respective clusters. For the problem of creating customer segments, a cluster's center point corresponds to the average customer of that segment. Since the data is currently reduced in dimension and scaled by a logarithm, we can recover the representative customer spending from these data points by applying the inverse transformations.
In the code block below, you will need to implement the following:
centers
using pca.inverse_transform
and assign the new centers to log_centers
.np.log
to log_centers
using np.exp
and assign the true centers to true_centers
.
In [18]:
# TODO: Inverse transform the centers
log_centers = pca.inverse_transform(centers)
# TODO: Exponentiate the centers
true_centers = np.exp(log_centers)
# Display the true centers
segments = ['Segment {}'.format(i) for i in range(0,len(centers))]
true_centers = pd.DataFrame(np.round(true_centers), columns = data.keys())
true_centers.index = segments
display(true_centers)
Consider the total purchase cost of each product category for the representative data points above, and reference the statistical description of the dataset at the beginning of this project. What set of establishments could each of the customer segments represent?
Hint: A customer who is assigned to 'Cluster X'
should best identify with the establishments represented by the feature set of 'Segment X'
.
Answer: The Segment 0 cutomer seems to be showing high projection value on the second principal component in PCA analysis. It has relatively high values for Fresh and Frozen category. However, overall values are smaller than mean for each category. This data point would correspond to small ice-cream parlor.
Segment 1 cutomer has high values on dominating categories for first principal component in PCA. This customer has a high on Milk, Grocery and Detergent_Paper category. This customer probably is a restaurant.
In [19]:
# Display the predictions
for i, pred in enumerate(sample_preds):
print "Sample point", i, "predicted to be in Cluster", pred
Answer: The predictions for Sample point 0 and 2 are assigned to cluster 1. This indeed matches the prediction at the start of this assignment where these customers were predicted to be restaurant or caffe.
The prediction for sample point 1 is cluster 0 which I predicted to be small ice-cream parlor. However, at the start I predicted it to be a small grocery shop given high consumption of Fresh. However, the profile do match for this cluster 0 and this sample data point with high fresh and frozen components.
In this final section, you will investigate ways that you can make use of the clustered data. First, you will consider how the different groups of customers, the customer segments, may be affected differently by a specific delivery scheme. Next, you will consider how giving a label to each customer (which segment that customer belongs to) can provide for additional features about the customer data. Finally, you will compare the customer segments to a hidden variable present in the data, to see whether the clustering identified certain relationships.
Companies will often run A/B tests when making small changes to their products or services to determine whether making that change will affect its customers positively or negatively. The wholesale distributor is considering changing its delivery service from currently 5 days a week to 3 days a week. However, the distributor will only make this change in delivery service for customers that react positively. How can the wholesale distributor use the customer segments to determine which customers, if any, would react positively to the change in delivery service?
Hint: Can we assume the change affects all customers equally? How can we determine which group of customers it affects the most?
Answer: Based on the profile of each segment the change in delivery serive of different groups should affect differently. We can use A/B tests for each cluster to determine the results of changes in delivery service.
First we choose a random sample from each of the cluster (treatment group) and use the remaining points in the cluster as control group. Then apply the changes in delivery services to the treatment group and can find if the customer segment will affect positively or negatively for the cluster.
Additional structure is derived from originally unlabeled data when using clustering techniques. Since each customer has a customer segment it best identifies with (depending on the clustering algorithm applied), we can consider 'customer segment' as an engineered feature for the data. Assume the wholesale distributor recently acquired ten new customers and each provided estimates for anticipated annual spending of each product category. Knowing these estimates, the wholesale distributor wants to classify each new customer to a customer segment to determine the most appropriate delivery service.
How can the wholesale distributor label the new customers using only their estimated product spending and the customer segment data?
Hint: A supervised learner could be used to train on the original customers. What would be the target variable?
Answer: To know the customer segment of a new customer any supervised learning algo can be used (preferably with non-linear hidden variables) with cluster id as the target variable.
Also, the model learned while cluster creation can be used for predicting the customer segment. E.g. if K-means was used, the new customer can be assined a customer id based on distance of the customer attributes to the center of K-clusters.
At the beginning of this project, it was discussed that the 'Channel'
and 'Region'
features would be excluded from the dataset so that the customer product categories were emphasized in the analysis. By reintroducing the 'Channel'
feature to the dataset, an interesting structure emerges when considering the same PCA dimensionality reduction applied earlier to the original dataset.
Run the code block below to see how each data point is labeled either 'HoReCa'
(Hotel/Restaurant/Cafe) or 'Retail'
the reduced space. In addition, you will find the sample points are circled in the plot, which will identify their labeling.
In [20]:
# Display the clustering results based on 'Channel' data
rs.channel_results(reduced_data, outliers, pca_samples)
How well does the clustering algorithm and number of clusters you've chosen compare to this underlying distribution of Hotel/Restaurant/Cafe customers to Retailer customers? Are there customer segments that would be classified as purely 'Retailers' or 'Hotels/Restaurants/Cafes' by this distribution? Would you consider these classifications as consistent with your previous definition of the customer segments?
Answer: The above plot shows the clusters which matches quite well with the number of clusters identified earlier in the analysis. Also the distibution of clusters matches a lot.
One observation here is, near the virtual boundary of clusters in my earlier analysis, there are quite a few customers which were not classified consistent to the above plot. One of the reason being, the clustering algorithm used (K-means) assign hard cluster to each point. However, assigning a probablilty (e.g. using EM algo) would have done more justice to such points.
Note: Once you have completed all of the code implementations and successfully answered each question above, you may finalize your work by exporting the iPython Notebook as an HTML document. You can do this by using the menu above and navigating to
File -> Download as -> HTML (.html). Include the finished document along with this notebook as your submission.