textmodel_nb: Naive Bayes classifier for texts

View source: R/textmodel_nb.R

textmodel_nbR Documentation

Naive Bayes classifier for texts

Description

Fit a multinomial or Bernoulli Naive Bayes model, given a dfm and some training labels.

Usage

textmodel_nb(
  x,
  y,
  smooth = 1,
  prior = c("uniform", "docfreq", "termfreq"),
  distribution = c("multinomial", "Bernoulli")
)

Arguments

x

the dfm on which the model will be fit. Does not need to contain only the training documents.

y

vector of training labels associated with each document identified in train. (These will be converted to factors if not already factors.)

smooth

smoothing parameter for feature counts, added to the feature frequency totals by training class

prior

prior distribution on texts; one of "uniform", "docfreq", or "termfreq". See Prior Distributions below.

distribution

count model for text features, can be multinomial or Bernoulli. To fit a "binary multinomial" model, first convert the dfm to a binary matrix using ⁠[quanteda::dfm_weight](x, scheme = "boolean")⁠.

Value

textmodel_nb() returns a list consisting of the following (where I is the total number of documents, J is the total number of features, and k is the total number of training classes):

call

original function call

param

k \times V; class conditional posterior estimates

x

the N \times V training dfm x

y

the N-length y training class vector, where NAs will not be used will be retained in the saved x matrix

distribution

character; the distribution of x for the NB model

priors

numeric; the class prior probabilities

smooth

numeric; the value of the smoothing parameter

Prior distributions

Prior distributions refer to the prior probabilities assigned to the training classes, and the choice of prior distribution affects the calculation of the fitted probabilities. The default is uniform priors, which sets the unconditional probability of observing the one class to be the same as observing any other class.

"Document frequency" means that the class priors will be taken from the relative proportions of the class documents used in the training set. This approach is so common that it is assumed in many examples, such as the worked example from Manning, Raghavan, and Schütze (2008) below. It is not the default in quanteda, however, since there may be nothing informative in the relative numbers of documents used to train a classifier other than the relative availability of the documents. When training classes are balanced in their number of documents (usually advisable), however, then the empirically computed "docfreq" would be equivalent to "uniform" priors.

Setting prior to "termfreq" makes the priors equal to the proportions of total feature counts found in the grouped documents in each training class, so that the classes with the largest number of features are assigned the largest priors. If the total count of features in each training class was the same, then "uniform" and "termfreq" would be the same.

Smoothing parameter

The smooth value is added to the feature frequencies, aggregated by training class, to avoid zero frequencies in any class. This has the effect of giving more weight to infrequent term occurrences.

Author(s)

Kenneth Benoit

References

Manning, C.D., Raghavan, P., & Schütze, H. (2008). An Introduction to Information Retrieval. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Chapter 13). Available at https://nlp.stanford.edu/IR-book/pdf/irbookonlinereading.pdf.

Jurafsky, D. & Martin, J.H. (2018). From Speech and Language Processing: An Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, and Speech Recognition. Draft of September 23, 2018 (Chapter 6, Naive Bayes). Available at https://web.stanford.edu/~jurafsky/slp3/.

See Also

predict.textmodel_nb()

Examples

## Example from 13.1 of _An Introduction to Information Retrieval_
library("quanteda")
txt <- c(d1 = "Chinese Beijing Chinese",
         d2 = "Chinese Chinese Shanghai",
         d3 = "Chinese Macao",
         d4 = "Tokyo Japan Chinese",
         d5 = "Chinese Chinese Chinese Tokyo Japan")
x <- dfm(tokens(txt), tolower = FALSE)
y <- factor(c("Y", "Y", "Y", "N", NA), ordered = TRUE)

## replicate IIR p261 prediction for test set (document 5)
(tmod1 <- textmodel_nb(x, y, prior = "docfreq"))
summary(tmod1)
coef(tmod1)
predict(tmod1, type = "prob")
predict(tmod1)

# contrast with other priors
predict(textmodel_nb(x, y, prior = "uniform"))
predict(textmodel_nb(x, y, prior = "termfreq"))

## replicate IIR p264 Bernoulli Naive Bayes
tmod2 <- textmodel_nb(x, y, distribution = "Bernoulli", prior = "docfreq")
predict(tmod2, newdata = x[5, ], type = "prob")
predict(tmod2, newdata = x[5, ])

quanteda.textmodels documentation built on Sept. 11, 2024, 8:19 p.m.