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Grant McDermott develop this new R package I had thought of: parttree
parttree
includes a set of simple functions for visualizing decision tree partitions in R with ggplot2
. The package is not yet on CRAN, but can be installed from GitHub using:
# install.packages("remotes") remotes::install_github("grantmcdermott/parttree")
Using the familiar ggplot2 syntax, we can simply add decision tree boundaries to a plot of our data.
In this example from his Github page, Grant trains a decision tree on the famous Titanic data using the parsnip
package. And then visualizes the resulting partition / decision boundaries using the simple function geom_parttree()
library(parsnip) library(titanic) ## Just for a different data set set.seed(123) ## For consistent jitter titanic_train$Survived = as.factor(titanic_train$Survived) ## Build our tree using parsnip (but with rpart as the model engine) ti_tree = decision_tree() %>% set_engine("rpart") %>% set_mode("classification") %>% fit(Survived ~ Pclass + Age, data = titanic_train) ## Plot the data and model partitions titanic_train %>% ggplot(aes(x=Pclass, y=Age)) + geom_jitter(aes(col=Survived), alpha=0.7) + geom_parttree(data = ti_tree, aes(fill=Survived), alpha = 0.1) + theme_minimal()
Super awesome!
This visualization precisely shows where the trained decision tree thinks it should predict that the passengers of the Titanic would have survived (blue regions) or not (red), based on their age
and passenger class (Pclass)
.
This will be super helpful if you need to explain to yourself, your team, or your stakeholders how you model works. Currently, only rpart
decision trees are supported, but I am very much hoping that Grant continues building this functionality!
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