h2o (version 3.32.0.1)

h2o.pd_plot: Plot partial dependence for a variable

Description

Partial dependence plot (PDP) gives a graphical depiction of the marginal effect of a variable on the response. The effect of a variable is measured in change in the mean response. PDP assumes independence between the feature for which is the PDP computed and the rest.

Usage

h2o.pd_plot(
  object,
  newdata,
  column,
  target = NULL,
  row_index = NULL,
  max_levels = 30
)

Arguments

object

An H2O model.

newdata

An H2OFrame. Used to generate predictions used in Partial Dependence calculations.

column

A feature column name to inspect. Character string.

target

If multinomial, plot PDP just for target category. Character string.

row_index

Optional. Calculate Individual Conditional Expectation (ICE) for row, row_index. Integer.

max_levels

An integer specifying the maximum number of factor levels to show. Defaults to 30.

Value

A ggplot2 object

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
library(h2o)
h2o.init()

# Import the wine dataset into H2O:
f <- "https://h2o-public-test-data.s3.amazonaws.com/smalldata/wine/winequality-redwhite-no-BOM.csv"
df <-  h2o.importFile(f)

# Set the response
response <- "quality"

# Split the dataset into a train and test set:
splits <- h2o.splitFrame(df, ratios = 0.8, seed = 1)
train <- splits[[1]]
test <- splits[[2]]

# Build and train the model:
gbm <- h2o.gbm(y = response,
               training_frame = train)

# Create the partial dependence plot
pdp <- h2o.pd_plot(gbm, test, column = "alcohol")
print(pdp)
# }

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