fri_c2_250_10

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Dataset:6033392



OpenML657MaRDI QIDQ6033392FDOQ6033392RO-CrateQ6033392

OpenML dataset with id 657

Author name not available (Why is that?)

Full work available at URL: https://api.openml.org/data/v1/download/1390167/fri_c2_250_10.arff

Upload date: 4 October 2014



Dataset Characteristics

Number of classes: 0
Number of features: 11 (numeric: 11, symbolic: 0 and in total binary: 0 )
Number of instances: 250
Number of instances with missing values: 0
Number of missing values: 0

Author: Source: Unknown - Date unknown Please cite:

The Friedman datasets are 80 artificially generated datasets originating from: J.H. Friedman (1999). Stochastic Gradient Boosting

The dataset names are coded as "fri_colinearintydegree_samplenumber_featurenumber".

Friedman is the one of the most used functions for data generation (Friedman, 1999). Friedman functions include both linear and non-linear relations between input and output, and a normalized noise (e) is added to the output. The Friedman function is as follows:

y=10*sin(pi*x1*x2)+20*(x3-0.5)^2=10*X4+5*X5+e

In the original Friedman function, there are 5 features for input. To measure the effects of non-related features, additional features are added to the datasets. These added features are independent from the output. However, to measure the algorithm's robustness to the colinearity, the datasets are generated with 5 different colinearity degrees. The colinearity degrees is the number of features depending on other features.

The generated Friedman dataset's parameters and values are given below: The number of features: 5 10 25 50 100 (only the first 5 features are related to the output. The rest are completely random) The number of samples: 100 250 500 1000 Colinearity degrees: 0 1 2 3 4 For the datasets with colinearity degree 4, the numbers of features are generated as 10, 25, 50 and 100. The other datasets have 5, 10, 25 and 50 features.

As a result, 80 artificial datasets are generated by (4 different feature number * 4 different sample number * 5 different colinearity degree)

The last attribute in each file is the target.





ROCrate

What is a RO-Crate?

A RO-Crate is a standardized research object package used to bundle data together with rich machine-readable metadata. Each RO-Crate contains:

  • the files belonging to the dataset (e.g. CSVs, images, code, documentation)
  • a ro-crate-metadata.json file describing the content, provenance, and context
  • persistent identifiers and references to related research objects (e.g. software, publications)

This ensures that the dataset can be easily reused, cited, validated, and interpreted in a reproducible manner. More information can be found here.

Download

You can download a RO-Crate for this dataset here: Download RO-Crate

HINT: The RO-Crate is created dynamically, so it could take up to 30 seconds until the downloads starts.


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