# cforest

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##### Random Forest

An implementation of the random forest and bagging ensemble algorithms utilizing conditional inference trees as base learners.

Keywords
tree
##### Usage
cforest(formula, data = list(), subset = NULL, weights = NULL,
controls = cforest_unbiased(),
xtrafo = ptrafo, ytrafo = ptrafo, scores = NULL)
proximity(object, newdata = NULL)
##### Arguments
formula

a symbolic description of the model to be fit. Note that symbols like : and - will not work and the tree will make use of all variables listed on the rhs of formula.

data

an data frame containing the variables in the model.

subset

an optional vector specifying a subset of observations to be used in the fitting process.

weights

an optional vector of weights to be used in the fitting process. Non-negative integer valued weights are allowed as well as non-negative real weights. Observations are sampled (with or without replacement) according to probabilities weights / sum(weights). The fraction of observations to be sampled (without replacement) is computed based on the sum of the weights if all weights are integer-valued and based on the number of weights greater zero else. Alternatively, weights can be a double matrix defining case weights for all ncol(weights) trees in the forest directly. This requires more storage but gives the user more control.

controls

an object of class ForestControl-class, which can be obtained using cforest_control (and its convenience interfaces cforest_unbiased and cforest_classical).

xtrafo

a function to be applied to all input variables. By default, the ptrafo function is applied.

ytrafo

a function to be applied to all response variables. By default, the ptrafo function is applied.

scores

an optional named list of scores to be attached to ordered factors.

object

an object as returned by cforest.

newdata

an optional data frame containing test data.

##### Details

This implementation of the random forest (and bagging) algorithm differs from the reference implementation in randomForest with respect to the base learners used and the aggregation scheme applied.

Conditional inference trees, see ctree, are fitted to each of the ntree (defined via cforest_control) bootstrap samples of the learning sample. Most of the hyper parameters in cforest_control regulate the construction of the conditional inference trees. Therefore you MUST NOT change anything you don't understand completely.

Hyper parameters you might want to change in cforest_control are:

1. The number of randomly preselected variables mtry, which is fixed to the value 5 by default here for technical reasons, while in randomForest the default values for classification and regression vary with the number of input variables.

2. The number of trees ntree. Use more trees if you have more variables.

3. The depth of the trees, regulated by mincriterion. Usually unstopped and unpruned trees are used in random forests. To grow large trees, set mincriterion to a small value.

The aggregation scheme works by averaging observation weights extracted from each of the ntree trees and NOT by averaging predictions directly as in randomForest. See Hothorn et al. (2004) for a description.

Predictions can be computed using predict. For observations with zero weights, predictions are computed from the fitted tree when newdata = NULL. While predict returns predictions of the same type as the response in the data set by default (i.e., predicted class labels for factors), treeresponse returns the statistics of the conditional distribution of the response (i.e., predicted class probabilities for factors). The same is done by predict(..., type = "prob"). Note that for multivariate responses predict does not convert predictions to the type of the response, i.e., type = "prob" is used.

Ensembles of conditional inference trees have not yet been extensively tested, so this routine is meant for the expert user only and its current state is rather experimental. However, there are some things available in cforest that can't be done with randomForest, for example fitting forests to censored response variables (see Hothorn et al., 2006a) or to multivariate and ordered responses.

Moreover, when predictors vary in their scale of measurement of number of categories, variable selection and computation of variable importance is biased in favor of variables with many potential cutpoints in randomForest, while in cforest unbiased trees and an adequate resampling scheme are used by default. See Hothorn et al. (2006b) and Strobl et al. (2007) as well as Strobl et al. (2009).

The proximity matrix is an $n \times n$ matrix $P$ with $P_{ij}$ equal to the fraction of trees where observations $i$ and $j$ are element of the same terminal node (when both $i$ and $j$ had non-zero weights in the same bootstrap sample).

##### Value

An object of class RandomForest-class.

##### References

Leo Breiman (2001). Random Forests. Machine Learning, 45(1), 5--32.

Torsten Hothorn, Berthold Lausen, Axel Benner and Martin Radespiel-Troeger (2004). Bagging Survival Trees. Statistics in Medicine, 23(1), 77--91.

Torsten Hothorn, Peter Buhlmann, Sandrine Dudoit, Annette Molinaro and Mark J. van der Laan (2006a). Survival Ensembles. Biostatistics, 7(3), 355--373.

Torsten Hothorn, Kurt Hornik and Achim Zeileis (2006b). Unbiased Recursive Partitioning: A Conditional Inference Framework. Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics, 15(3), 651--674. Preprint available from http://statmath.wu-wien.ac.at/~zeileis/papers/Hothorn+Hornik+Zeileis-2006.pdf

Carolin Strobl, Anne-Laure Boulesteix, Achim Zeileis and Torsten Hothorn (2007). Bias in Random Forest Variable Importance Measures: Illustrations, Sources and a Solution. BMC Bioinformatics, 8, 25. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/8/25

Carolin Strobl, James Malley and Gerhard Tutz (2009). An Introduction to Recursive Partitioning: Rationale, Application, and Characteristics of Classification and Regression Trees, Bagging, and Random forests. Psychological Methods, 14(4), 323--348.

• cforest
• proximity
##### Examples
# NOT RUN {
set.seed(290875)

### honest (i.e., out-of-bag) cross-classification of
### true vs. predicted classes
data("mammoexp", package = "TH.data")
table(mammoexp$ME, predict(cforest(ME ~ ., data = mammoexp, control = cforest_unbiased(ntree = 50)), OOB = TRUE)) ### fit forest to censored response if (require("TH.data") && require("survival")) { data("GBSG2", package = "TH.data") bst <- cforest(Surv(time, cens) ~ ., data = GBSG2, control = cforest_unbiased(ntree = 50)) ### estimate conditional Kaplan-Meier curves treeresponse(bst, newdata = GBSG2[1:2,], OOB = TRUE) ### if you can't resist to look at individual trees ... party:::prettytree(bst@ensemble[[1]], names(bst@data@get("input"))) } ### proximity, see ?randomForest iris.cf <- cforest(Species ~ ., data = iris, control = cforest_unbiased(mtry = 2)) iris.mds <- cmdscale(1 - proximity(iris.cf), eig = TRUE) op <- par(pty="s") pairs(cbind(iris[,1:4], iris.mds$points), cex = 0.6, gap = 0,
col = c("red", "green", "blue")[as.numeric(iris\$Species)],
main = "Iris Data: Predictors and MDS of Proximity Based on cforest")
par(op)

# }

Documentation reproduced from package party, version 1.3-3, License: GPL-2

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