sparklyr (version 0.3.7)

ml_gradient_boosted_trees: Spark ML -- Gradient-Boosted Tree

Description

Perform regression or classification using gradient-boosted trees.

Usage

ml_gradient_boosted_trees(x, response, features, max.bins = 32L, max.depth = 5L, type = c("auto", "regression", "classification"), ml.options = ml_options(), ...)

Arguments

x
An object coercable to a Spark DataFrame (typically, a tbl_spark).
response
The name of the response vector (as a length-one character vector), or a formula, giving a symbolic description of the model to be fitted. When response is a formula, it is used in preference to other parameters to set the response, features, and intercept parameters (if available). Currently, only simple linear combinations of existing parameters is supposed; e.g. response ~ feature1 + feature2 + .... The intercept term can be omitted by using - 1 in the model fit.
features
The name of features (terms) to use for the model fit.
max.bins
The maximum number of bins used for discretizing continuous features and for choosing how to split on features at each node. More bins give higher granularity.
max.depth
Maximum depth of the tree (>= 0); that is, the maximum number of nodes separating any leaves from the root of the tree.
type
The type of model to fit. "regression" treats the response as a continuous variable, while "classification" treats the response as a categorical variable. When "auto" is used, the model type is inferred based on the response variable type -- if it is a numeric type, then regression is used; classification otherwise.
ml.options
Optional arguments, used to affect the model generated. See ml_options for more details.
...
Optional arguments; currently unused.

See Also

Other Spark ML routines: ml_als_factorization, ml_decision_tree, ml_generalized_linear_regression, ml_kmeans, ml_lda, ml_linear_regression, ml_logistic_regression, ml_multilayer_perceptron, ml_naive_bayes, ml_one_vs_rest, ml_pca, ml_random_forest, ml_survival_regression