How I categorize a features?

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HelpAStudent
HelpAStudent el 14 de Mayo de 2022
Comentada: the cyclist el 14 de Mayo de 2022
Hi! I have a dataset like the histogram here: with some data around 0, some other around 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.
I would like to make the features categorical as the amount at witch are they roughly equal in value.
This is the histogram of the features:
Please help me
  1 comentario
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 14 de Mayo de 2022
It may or may not be possible. How were those data values determined?

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Respuesta aceptada

the cyclist
the cyclist el 14 de Mayo de 2022
Editada: the cyclist el 14 de Mayo de 2022
Do you mean that you have numerical values, and you want to treat those as categorical instead? You can convert numeric to categorical using the categorical function.
x = 1:5
x = 1×5
1 2 3 4 5
c = categorical(x)
c = 1×5 categorical array
1 2 3 4 5
You said "roughly" equal in value, so maybe you need to do some rounding first?
x = [1.1 2.2 2.9 3.8 5.1]
x = 1×5
1.1000 2.2000 2.9000 3.8000 5.1000
c = categorical(round(x))
c = 1×5 categorical array
1 2 3 4 5
  1 comentario
the cyclist
the cyclist el 14 de Mayo de 2022
When I wrote this answer, I hadn't noticed that your values are not 1,2,3,4,5, but rather 10^-3 times that. So, you'll need to round differently:
x = [1.1 2.2 2.9 3.8 5.1]*1.e-3
x = 1×5
0.0011 0.0022 0.0029 0.0038 0.0051
rx = round(x,3)
rx = 1×5
0.0010 0.0020 0.0030 0.0040 0.0050
c = categorical(rx)
c = 1×5 categorical array
0.001 0.002 0.003 0.004 0.005

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Más respuestas (1)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 14 de Mayo de 2022
You can add a tiny bit of noise then recompute the histogram edges such that the bins will be equal percentages (heights). Like this:
data = [zeros(1, 1580), ones(1, 50), 2*ones(1, 70), 2*ones(1, 50), 3*ones(1, 40), 4*ones(1, 25), 4.7*ones(1, 10)]/1000;
subplot(2, 1, 1);
[counts, edges] = histcounts(data);
bar(edges(1:end-1), counts);
grid on;
title('Uneven Bars', 'FontSize', 20);
% Now add a tiny bit of noise and sort
noisyData = data + 0.000001 * rand(size(data));
sortedData = sort(noisyData);
% Get cdf
c = cumsum(sortedData);
c = rescale(c, 0, 100); % Convert to percent.
% Find 6 bins
numBins = 6;
indexes = round(linspace(1, length(data), numBins+1))
indexes = 1×7
1 305 609 913 1217 1521 1825
edges2 = sortedData(indexes)
edges2 = 1×7
0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.0047
subplot(2, 1, 2);
counts2 = histcounts(noisyData, edges2)
counts2 = 1×6
304 304 304 304 304 305
bar(edges2(1:end-1), counts2);
grid on;
title('Even Bars', 'FontSize', 20);
  1 comentario
the cyclist
the cyclist el 14 de Mayo de 2022
I'll point out here that @Image Analyst seems to have interpreted your phrase "as the amount at witch are they roughly equal in value" to mean you want the bar heights to be equal.
I interpreted that differently, and took it to to mean that you wanted your data values to be equal (rather than "roughly equal"), which is why our two approaches are very different.

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