A new variable importance measure for random forests with missing data
From MaRDI portal
Publication:892440
DOI10.1007/S11222-012-9349-1zbMATH Open1325.62011OpenAlexW2017665047MaRDI QIDQ892440FDOQ892440
Authors: A. Hapfelmeier, Torsten Hothorn, K. Ulm, Carolin Strobl
Publication date: 19 November 2015
Published in: Statistics and Computing (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11222-012-9349-1
Recommendations
- Variable selection by random forests using data with missing values
- Analysis of missing data with random forests
- A new variable selection approach using random forests
- A computationally fast variable importance test for random forests for high-dimensional data
- Empirical characterization of random forest variable importance measures
Cites Work
- Empirical characterization of random forest variable importance measures
- Consistency of random forests and other averaging classifiers
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Random forests
- Bagging predictors
- Inference and missing data
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Random Forests and Adaptive Nearest Neighbors
- Unbiased split selection for classification trees based on the Gini index
- Fully conditional specification in multivariate imputation
- Recursive partitioning on incomplete data using surrogate decisions and multiple imputation
- Bias in information-based measures in decision tree induction
Cited In (11)
- Sparsity oriented importance learning for high-dimensional linear regression
- An update on statistical boosting in biomedicine
- Variable selection by random forests using data with missing values
- Predictive Distribution Modeling Using Transformation Forests
- Estimation of a predictor's importance by random forests when there is missing data: RISK prediction in liver surgery using laboratory data
- Ordinal trees and random forests: score-free recursive partitioning and improved ensembles
- Consistent and unbiased variable selection under indepedent features using random forest permutation importance
- Efficient permutation testing of variable importance measures by the example of random forests
- Interaction forests: identifying and exploiting interpretable quantitative and qualitative interaction effects
- All models are wrong, but many are useful: learning a variable's importance by studying an entire class of prediction models simultaneously
- Analysis of missing data with random forests
Uses Software
This page was built for publication: A new variable importance measure for random forests with missing data
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q892440)