Random Forests (Leo Breiman 2001) (RF) are a non-parametric statistical method requiring no distributional assumptions on covariate relation to the response. RF are a robust, nonlinear technique that optimizes predictive accuracy by fitting an ensemble of trees to stabilize model estimates. The package (Ishwaran and Kogalur 2014) is a unified treatment of Breiman’s random forests for survival, regression and classification problems.
Predictive accuracy make RF an attractive alternative to parametric models, though complexity and interpretability of the forest hinder wider application of the method. We introduce the package, tools for visually understand random forest models grown in R
( Core Team 2014) with the package. The package is structured to extract intermediate data objects from objects and generates figures using the (Wickham 2009) graphics package
This document is structured as a tutorial for building random forests for regression with the package and using the package for investigating how the forest is constructed. We investigate the Boston Housing data Belsley, Kuh, and Welsch (1980). We demonstrate random forest variable selection using Variable Importance (VIMP) (Leo Breiman 2001) and Minimal Depth (Ishwaran et al. 2010), a property derived from the construction of each tree within the forest. We will also demonstrate the use of variable dependence plots (Friedman 2000) to aid interpretation RF results. We then examine variable interactions between covariates using a minimal depth interactions, and conditional variable dependence plots. The goal of the exercise is to demonstrate the strength of using Random Forest methods for both prediction and information retrieval in regression settings.
This document is a package vignette for the package for “Visually Exploring Random Forests” (https://cran.r-project.org/package=ggRandomForests). The package is designed for use with the package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=randomForestSRC) (Ishwaran and Kogalur 2014) for growing random forests for survival (time to event response), regression (continuous response) and classification (categorical response) settings and uses the package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=ggplot2) (Wickham 2009) for plotting diagnostic and variable association results. is structured to extract data objects from objects and provides functions for printing and plotting these objects.
The vignette is a tutorial for using the package with the package for building and post-processing random forests for regression settings. In this tutorial, we explore a random forest for regression model constructed for the Boston housing data set Belsley, Kuh, and Welsch (1980), available in the MASS
package (Venables and Ripley 2002). We grow a random forest and demonstrate how can be used when determining how the response depends on predictive variables within the model. The tutorial demonstrates the design and usage of many of functions and features and also how to modify and customize the resulting ggplot
graphic objects along the way.
The vignette is written in using the knitr
package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=knitr]Xie (2013), which facilitates weaving R
( Core Team 2014) code, results and figures into document text. Throughout this document, R
code will be displayed in code blocks as shown below. This code block loads the R
packages required to run the source code listed in code blocks throughout the remainder of this document.
> ################## Load packages ##################
> library("ggplot2") # Graphics engine
> library("RColorBrewer") # Nice color palettes
> library("plot3D") # for 3d surfaces.
> library("dplyr") # Better data manipulations
> library("tidyr") # gather variables into long format
> library("parallel") # mclapply for multicore processing
>
> # Analysis packages.
> library("randomForestSRC") # random forests for survival, regression and
> # classification
> library("ggRandomForests") # ggplot2 random forest figures (This!)
>
> ################ Default Settings ##################
> theme_set(theme_bw()) # A ggplot2 theme with white background
>
> ## Set open circle for censored, and x for events
> event_marks <- c(1, 4)
> event_labels <- c(FALSE, TRUE)
>
> ## We want red for death events, so reorder this set.
> str_col <- brewer.pal(3, "Set1")[c(2, 1, 3)]
This vignette is available within the package on the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN) (https://www.r-project.org) ( Core Team 2014). Once the package has been installed, the vignette can be viewed directly from within R
with the following command:
> vignette("randomForestSRC-Regression", package = "ggRFVignette")
A development version of the package is also available on GitHub (https://github.com). We invite comments, feature requests and bug reports for this package at (https://github.com/ehrlinger/ggRandomForests).
Random Forests (Leo Breiman 2001) (RF) are a fully non-parametric statistical method which requires no distributional or functional assumptions on covariate relation to the response. RF is a robust, nonlinear technique that optimizes predictive accuracy by fitting an ensemble of trees to stabilize model estimates. Random Survival Forests (RSF) Ishwaran et al. (2008) are an extension of Breiman’s RF techniques to survival settings, allowing efficient non-parametric analysis of time to event data. The package (Ishwaran and Kogalur 2014) is a unified treatment of Breiman’s random forests for survival (time to event response), regression (continuous response) and classification (categorical response) problems.
Predictive accuracy make RF an attractive alternative to parametric models, though complexity and interpretability of the forest hinder wider application of the method. We introduce the package for visually exploring random forest models. The package is structured to extract intermediate data objects from objects and generate figures using the graphics package (Wickham 2009).
Many of the figures created by the package are also available directly from within the package. However offers the following advantages:
Separation of data and figures: contains functions that operate on either the randomForestSRC::rfsrc
forest object directly, or on the output from post processing functions (i.e. plot.variable
, var.select
, find.interaction
) to generate intermediate data objects. Functions are provide to further process these objects and plot results using the graphics package. Alternatively, users can use these data objects for their own custom plotting or analysis operations.
Each data object/figure is a single, self contained object. This allows simple modification and manipulation of the data or objects to meet users specific needs and requirements.
The use of for plotting. We chose to use the package for our figures to allow users flexibility in modifying the figures to their liking. Each plot function returns either a single ggplot
object, or a list
of ggplot
objects, allowing users to use additional functions or themes to modify and customize the figures to their liking.
This document is formatted as a tutorial for using the package for building and post-processing random forest models with the package for investigating how the forest is constructed. In this tutorial, we use the Boston Housing Data (), available in the MASS
package (Venables and Ripley 2002), to build a random forest for regression () and demonstrate the tools in the package for examining the forest construction.
Random forests are not parsimonious, but use all variables available in the construction of a response predictor. We demonstrate a random forest variable selection () process using the Variable Importance () measure (VIMP) (Leo Breiman 2001) as well as Minimal Depth () (Ishwaran et al. 2010), a property derived from the construction of each tree within the forest, to assess the impact of variables on forest prediction.
Once we have an idea of which variables we are want to investigate further, we will use variable dependence plots (Friedman 2000) to understand how a variable is related to the response. Marginal variable dependence () plots give us an idea of the overall trend of a variable/response relation, while partial dependence () plots show us a risk adjusted relation. These figures may show strongly non-linear variable/response relations that are not easily obtained through a parametric approach. We are also interested in examining variable interactions () within the forest model. Using a minimal depth approach, we can quantify how closely variables are related within the forest, and generate marginal dependence coplots() and partial dependence coplots () (risk adjusted) conditioning plots (coplots) Cleveland (1993) to examine these interactions graphically.
The Boston Housing data is a standard benchmark data set for regression models. It contains data for 506 census tracts of Boston from the 1970 census Belsley, Kuh, and Welsch (1980). The data is available in multiple R
packages, but to keep the installation dependencies for the package down, we will use the data contained in the MASS
package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=MASS) (Venables and Ripley 2002), available with the base install of R
. The following code block loads the data into the environment. We include a table of the Boston data set variable names, types and descriptions for reference when we interpret the model results.
> # Load the Boston Housing data
> data(Boston, package = "MASS")
>
> # Set modes correctly. For binary variables: transform to logical
> Boston$chas <- as.logical(Boston$chas)
Variable | Description | type |
---|---|---|
crim | Crime rate by town. | numeric |
zn | Proportion of residential land zoned for lots over 25,000 sq.ft. | numeric |
indus | Proportion of non-retail business acres per town. | numeric |
chas | Charles River (tract bounds river). | logical |
nox | Nitrogen oxides concentration (10 ppm). | numeric |
rm | Number of rooms per dwelling. | numeric |
age | Proportion of units built prior to 1940. | numeric |
dis | Distances to Boston employment center. | numeric |
rad | Accessibility to highways. | integer |
tax | Property tax rate per $10,000. | numeric |
ptratio | Pupil teacher ratio by town. | numeric |
black | Proportion of blacks by town. | numeric |
lstat | Lower status of the population (percent). | numeric |
medv | Median value of homes ($1000s). | numeric |
The main objective of the Boston Housing data is to investigate variables associated with predicting the median value of homes (continuous medv
response) within 506 suburban areas of Boston.
It is good practice to view your data before beginning an analysis, what(Tukey 1977) refers to as Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA). To facilitate this, we use figures with the ggplot2::facet_wrap
command to create two sets of panel plots, one for categorical variables with boxplots at each level, and one of scatter plots for continuous variables. Each variable is plotted along a selected continuous variable on the X-axis. These figures help to find outliers, missing values and other data anomalies in each variable before getting deep into the analysis. We have also created a separate shiny
app (https://shiny.rstudio.com) (Chang et al. 2015), available at (https://ehrlinger.shinyapps.io/xportEDA), for creating similar figures with an arbitrary data set, to make the EDA process easier for users.
The Boston housing data consists almost entirely of continuous variables, with the exception of the “Charles river” logical variable. A simple EDA visualization to use for this data is a single panel plot of the continuous variables, with observation points colored by the logical variable. Missing values in our continuous variable plots are indicated by the rug marks along the x-axis, of which there are none in this data. We used the Boston housing response variable, the median value of homes (medv
), for X variable.
This figure is loosely related to a pairs scatter plot (Becker, Chambers, and Wilks 1988), but in this case we only examine the relation between the response variable against the remainder. Plotting the data against the response also gives us a “sanity check” when viewing our model results. It’s pretty obvious from this figure that we should find a strong relation between median home values and the lstat
and rm
variables.
A Random Forest is grown by bagging (L. Breiman 1996a) a collection of classification and regression trees (CART) (L. Breiman et al. 1984). The method uses a set of \(B\) bootstrap (Efron and Tibshirani 1994) samples, growing an independent tree model on each sub-sample of the population. Each tree is grown by recursively partitioning the population based on optimization of a split rule over the \(p\)-dimensional covariate space. At each split, a subset of \(m \le p\) candidate variables are tested for the split rule optimization, dividing each node into two daughter nodes. Each daughter node is then split again until the process reaches the stopping criteria of either node purity or node member size, which defines the set of terminal (unsplit) nodes for the tree. In regression trees, the split rule is based on minimizing the mean squared error, whereas in classification problems, the Gini index is used (Friedman 2000).
Random Forests sort each training set observation into one unique terminal node per tree. Tree estimates for each observation are constructed at each terminal node, among the terminal node members. The Random Forest estimate for each observation is then calculated by aggregating, averaging (regression) or votes (classification), the terminal node results across the collection of \(B\) trees.
For this tutorial, we grow the random forest for regression using the rfsrc
command to predict the median home value (medv
variable) using the remaining 13 independent predictor variables. For this example we will use the default set of \(B=1000\) trees (ntree
argument), \(m=5\) candidate variables (mtry
) for each split with a stopping criteria of at most nodesize=5
observations within each terminal node.
Because growing random forests are computationally expensive, and the package is targeted at the visualization of random forest objects, we will use cached copies of the objects throughout this document. We include the cached objects as data sets in the package. The actual rfsrc
calls are included in comments within code blocks.
> # Load the data, from the call:
> rfsrc_boston <- rfsrc(medv ~ ., data = Boston,
+ importance = TRUE, err.block = 5)
>
> # print the forest summary
> rfsrc_boston
The randomForestSRC::print.rfsrc
summary details the parameters used for the rfsrc
call described above, and returns variance and generalization error estimate from the forest training set. The forest is built from 506 observations and 13 independent variables. It was constructed for the continuous medv
variable using ntree=1000
regression (regr
) trees, randomly selecting 5 candidate variables at each node split, and terminating nodes with no fewer than 5 observations.
One advantage of Random Forests is a built in generalization error estimate. Each bootstrap sample selects approximately 63.2% of the population on average. The remaining 36.8% of observations, the Out-of-Bag (OOB) (L. Breiman 1996b) sample, can be used as a hold out test set for each of the trees in the forest. An OOB prediction error estimate can be calculated for each observation by predicting the response over the set of trees which were NOT trained with that particular observation. The Out-of-Bag prediction error estimates have been shown to be nearly identical to n–fold cross validation estimates (Hastie, Tibshirani, and Friedman 2009). This feature of Random Forests allows us to obtain both model fit and validation in one pass of the algorithm.
The gg_error
function operates on the randomForestSRC::rfsrc
object to extract the error estimates as the forest is grown. The code block demonstrates part the design philosophy, to create separate data objects and provide functions to operate on the data objects. The following code block first creates a gg_error
object, then uses the plot.gg_error
function to create a ggplot
object for display.
> # Plot the OOB errors against the growth of the forest.
> gg_e <- gg_error(rfsrc_boston)
> gg_e <- gg_e %>% filter(!is.na(error))
> class(gg_e) <- c("gg_error", class(gg_e))
> plot(gg_e)
This figure demonstrates that it does not take a large number of trees to stabilize the forest prediction error estimate. However, to ensure that each variable has enough of a chance to be included in the forest prediction process, we do want to create a rather large random forest of trees.
The gg_rfsrc
function extracts the OOB prediction estimates from the random forest. This code block executes the the data extraction and plotting in one line, since we are not interested in holding the prediction estimates for later reuse. Also note that we add in the additional command (coord_cartesian
) to modify the plot object. Each of the plot commands return ggplot
objects, which we can also store for modification or reuse later in the analysis.
> # Plot predicted median home values.
> plot(gg_rfsrc(rfsrc_boston), alpha = .5) +
+ coord_cartesian(ylim = c(5, 49))
The gg_rfsrc
plot shows the predicted median home value, one point for each observation in the training set. The points are jittered around a single point on the x-axis, since we are only looking at predicted values from the forest. These estimates are Out of Bag, which are analogous to test set estimates. The boxplot is shown to give an indication of the distribution of the prediction estimates. For this analysis the figure is another model sanity check, as we are more interested in exploring the why questions for these predictions.
Random forests are not parsimonious, but use all variables available in the construction of a response predictor. Also, unlike parametric models, Random Forests do not require the explicit specification of the functional form of covariates to the response. Therefore there is no explicit p-value/significance test for variable selection with a random forest model. Instead, RF ascertain which variables contribute to the prediction through the split rule optimization, optimally choosing variables which separate observations. We use two separate approaches to explore the RF selection process, Variable Importance (\autoref{variable-importance) and Minimal Depth (\autoref{minimal-depth).
Variable importance (VIMP) was originally defined for CART using a measure involving surrogate variables (see Chapter 5 of (L. Breiman et al. 1984)). The most popular VIMP method uses a prediction error approach involving “noising-up” each variable in turn. VIMP for a variable \(x_v\) is the difference between prediction error when \(x_v\) is noised up by randomly permuting its values, compared to prediction error under the observed values Ishwaran et al. (2008).
Since VIMP is the difference between OOB prediction error before and after permutation, a large VIMP value indicates that misspecification detracts from the variable predictive accuracy in the forest. VIMP close to zero indicates the variable contributes nothing to predictive accuracy, and negative values indicate the predictive accuracy improves when the variable is misspecified. In the later case, we assume noise is more informative than the true variable. As such, we ignore variables with negative and near zero values of VIMP, relying on large positive values to indicate that the predictive power of the forest is dependent on those variables.
The gg_vimp
function extracts VIMP measures for each of the variables used to grow the forest. The plot.gg_vimp
function shows the variables, in VIMP rank order, from the largest (Lower Status) at the top, to smallest (Charles River) at the bottom. VIMP measures are shown using bars to compare the scale of the error increase under permutation.
> # Plot the VIMP rankings of independent variables.
> plot(gg_vimp(rfsrc_boston), lbls = st_labs)
For our random forest, the top two variables (lstat
and rm
) have the largest VIMP, with a sizable difference to the remaining variables, which mostly have similar VIMP measure. This indicates we should focus attention on these two variables, at least, over the others.
In this example, all VIMP measures are positive, though some are small. When there are both negative and positive VIMP values, the plot.gg_vimp
function will color VIMP by the sign of the measure. We use the lbls
argument to pass a named vector
of meaningful text descriptions to the plot.gg_vimp
function, replacing the often terse variable names used by default.
In VIMP, prognostic risk factors are determined by testing the forest prediction under alternative data settings, ranking the most important variables according to their impact on predictive ability of the forest. An alternative method uses inspection of the forest construction to rank variables. Minimal depth assumes that variables with high impact on the prediction are those that most frequently split nodes nearest to the trunks of the trees (i.e. at the root node) where they partition large samples of the population.
Within a tree, node levels are numbered based on their relative distance to the trunk of the tree (with the root at 0). Minimal depth measures the important risk factors by averaging the depth of the first split for each variable over all trees within the forest. Lower values of this measure indicate variables important in splitting large groups of patients.
The maximal subtree for a variable \(x\) is the largest subtree whose root node splits on \(x\). All parent nodes of \(x\)’s maximal subtree have nodes that split on variables other than \(x\). The largest maximal subtree possible is at the root node. If a variable does not split the root node, it can have more than one maximal subtree, or a maximal subtree may also not exist if there are no splits on the variable. The minimal depth of a variables is a surrogate measure of predictiveness of the variable. The smaller the minimal depth, the more impact the variable has sorting observations, and therefore on the forest prediction.
The gg_minimal_depth
function is analogous to the gg_vimp
function for minimal depth. Variables are ranked from most important at the top (minimal depth measure), to least at the bottom (maximal minimal depth). The vertical dashed line indicates the minimal depth threshold where smaller minimal depth values indicate higher importance and larger indicate lower importance.
The randomForestSRC::var.select
call is again a computationally intensive function, as it traverses the forest finding the maximal subtree within each tree for each variable before averaging the results we use in the gg_minimal_depth
call. We again use the cached object strategy here to save computational time. The var.select
call is included in the comment of this code block.
> # Load the data, from the call:
> varsel_boston <- var.select(rfsrc_boston)
>
> # Save the gg_minimal_depth object for later use.
> gg_md <- gg_minimal_depth(varsel_boston)
>
> # plot the object
> plot(gg_md, lbls = st_labs)
In general, the selection of variables according to VIMP is to rather arbitrarily examine the values, looking for some point along the ranking where there is a large difference in VIMP measures. The minimal depth threshold method has a more quantitative approach to determine a selection threshold. Given minimal depth is a quantitative property of the forest construction, (Ishwaran et al. 2010) also construct an analytic threshold for evidence of variable impact. A simple optimistic threshold rule uses the mean of the minimal depth distribution, classifying variables with minimal depth lower than this threshold as important in forest prediction. The minimal depth plot for our model indicates there are ten variables which have a higher impact (minimal depth below the mean value threshold) than the remaining three.
Since the VIMP and Minimal Depth measures use different criteria, we expect the variable ranking to be somewhat different. We use gg_minimal_vimp
function to compare rankings between minimal depth and VIMP. In this call, we plot the stored gg_minimal_depth
object (gg_md
), which would be equivalent to calling plot.gg_minimal_vimp(varsel_boston)
or plot(gg_minimal_vimp(varsel_boston))
.
> # gg_minimal_depth objects contain information about
> # both minimal depth and VIMP.
> plot(gg_minimal_vimp(gg_md))
The points along the red dashed line indicates where the measures are in agreement. Points above the red dashed line are ranked higher by VIMP than by minimal depth, indicating the variables are sensitive to misspecification. Those below the line have a higher minimal depth ranking, indicating they are better at dividing large portions of the population. The further the points are from the line, the more the discrepancy between measures. The construction of this figure is skewed towards a minimal depth approach, by ranking variables along the y-axis, though points are colored by the sign of VIMP.
In our example, both minimal depth and VIMP indicate the strong relation of lstat
and rm
variables to the forest prediction, which agrees with our expectation from the Data: Boston Housing Values () done at the beginning of this document. We now turn to investigating how these, and other variables, are related to the predicted response.
As random forests are not a parsimonious methodology, we can use the minimal depth and VIMP measures to reduce the number of variables we need to examine to a manageable subset. We would like to know how the forest response depends on some specific variables of interest. We often choose to examine variables of interest based on the study question, or other previous knowledge. In the absence of this, we will look at variables that contribute most to the predictive accuracy of the forest.
Although often characterized as a “black box” method, it is possible to express a random forest in functional form. In the end the forest predictor is some function, although complex, of the predictor variables \[\hat{f}_{rf} = f(x).\] We use graphical methods to examine the forest predicted response dependency on covariates. We again have two options, Variable Dependence () plots are quick and easy to generate, and Partial Dependence (\autoref{partial-dependence) plots are computationally intensive but give us a risk adjusted look at the dependence.
Variable dependence plots show the predicted response as a function of a covariate of interest, where each observation is represented by a point on the plot. Each predicted point is an individual observations, dependent on the full combination of all other covariates, not only on the covariate of interest. Interpretation of variable dependence plots can only be in general terms, as point predictions are a function of all covariates in that particular observation. However, variable dependence is straight forward to calculate, only requiring the predicted response for each observation.
We use the gg_variable
function call to extract the training set variables and the predicted OOB response from randomForestSRC::rfsrc
and randomForestSRC::predict
objects. In the following code block, we will store the gg_variable
data object for later use, as all remaining variable dependence plots can be constructed from this (gg_v
) object. We will also use the minimal depth selected variables (minimal depth lower than the threshold value) from the previously stored gg_minimal_depth
object (gg_md$topvars
) to filter the variables of interest.
The plot.gg_variable
function call operates in the gg_variable
object. We pass it the list of variables of interest (xvar
) and request a single panel (panel=TRUE
) to display the figures. By default, the plot.gg_variable
function returns a list of ggplot
objects, one figure for each variable named in xvar
argument. The next three arguments are passed to internal ggplot
plotting routines. The se
and span
arguments are used to modify the internal call to ggplot2::geom_smooth
for fitting smooth lines to the data. The alpha
argument lightens the coloring points in the ggplot2::geom_point
call, making it easier to see point over plotting. We also demonstrate modification of the plot labels using the ggplot2::labs
function.
This figure looks very similar to the Data: Boston Housing Values (\autoref{data-boston-housing-values) figure, although with transposed axis as we plot the response variable on the y-axis. The closer the panels match, the better the RF prediction. The panels are sorted to match the order of variables in the xvar
argument and include a smooth loess line Cleveland and Devlin (1988), with 95% shaded confidence band, to indicates the trend of the prediction dependence over the covariate values.
There is not a convenient method to panel scatter plots and boxplots together, so we recommend creating panel plots for each variable type separately. The Boston housing data does contain a single categorical variable, the Charles river logical variable. Variable dependence plots for categorical variables are constructed using boxplots to show the distribution of the predictions within each category. Although the Charles river variable has the lowest importance scores in both VIMP and minimal depth measures, we include the variable dependence plot as an example of categorical variable dependence.
> plot(gg_v, xvar = "chas", alpha = 0.4) +
+ labs(y = st_labs["medv"])
>
> # , points=FALSE, se=FALSE, notch=TRUE
The figure shows that most housing tracts do not border the Charles river (chas=FALSE
), and comparing the distributions of the predicted median housing values indicates no significant difference in home values. This reinforces the findings in both VIMP and Minimal depth, the Charles river variable has very little impact on the forest prediction of median home values.
Partial variable dependence plots are a risk adjusted alternative to variable dependence. Partial plots are generated by integrating out the effects of all variables beside the covariate of interest. Partial dependence data are constructed by selecting points evenly spaced along the distribution of the \(X\) variable of interest. For each value (\(X = x\)), we calculate the average RF prediction over all other covariates in \(X\) by \[ \tilde{f}(x) = \frac{1}{n} \sum_{i = 1}^n \hat{f}(x, x_{i, o}), \] where \(\hat{f}\) is the predicted response from the random forest and \(x_{i, o}\) is the value for all other covariates other than \(X = x\) for the observation \(i\) (Friedman 2000). Essentially, we average a set of predictions for each observation in the training set at the value of \(X=x\). We repeating the process for a sequence of \(X=x\) values to generate the estimated points to create a partial dependence plot.
Partial plots are another computationally intensive analysis, especially when there are a large number of observations. We again turn to our data caching strategy here. The default parameters for the randomForestSRC::plot.variable
function generate partial dependence estimates at npts=25
points (the default value) along the variable of interest. For each point of interest, the plot.variable
function averages n
response predictions. This is repeated for each of the variables of interest and the results are returned for later analysis.
We again order the panels by minimal depth ranking. We see again how the lstat
and rm
variables are strongly related to the median value response, making the partial dependence of the remaining variables look flat. We also see strong nonlinearity of these two variables. The lstat
variable looks rather quadratic, while the rm
shape is more complex.
We could stop here, indicating that the RF analysis has found these ten variables to be important in predicting the median home values. That increasing lstat
(percentage population of lower status) values are associated with decreasing median home values (medv
) and increasing rm > 6
(number of rooms \(> 6\)) are associated with increasing median home values. However, we may also be interested in investigating how these variables work together to help improve the random forest prediction of median home values.
Using the different variable dependence measures, it is also possible to calculate measures of pairwise interactions among variables. Recall that minimal depth measure is defined by averaging the tree depth of variable \(i\) relative to the root node. To detect interactions, this calculation can be modified to measure the minimal depth of a variable \(j\) with respect to the maximal subtree for variable \(i\) Ishwaran et al. (2011).
The randomForestSRC::find.interaction
function traverses the forest, calculating all pairwise minimal depth interactions, and returns a \(p \times p\) matrix of interaction measures. For each row, the diagonal terms are are related to the minimal depth relative to the root node, though normalized to minimize scaling issues. Each off diagonal minimal depth term is relative to the diagonal term on that row. Small values indicate that an off diagonal term typically splits close to the diagonal term, indicating an forest split proximity of the two variables.
The gg_interaction
function wraps the find.interaction
matrix for use with the provided plot and print functions. The xvar
argument indicates which variables we’re interested in looking at. We again use the cache strategy, and collect the figures together using the panel=TRUE
option.
plots the interactions for the target variable (shown in the red cross) with interaction scores for all remaining variables. We expect the covariate with lowest minimal depth (lstat
) to be associated with almost all other variables, as it typically splits close to the root node, so viewed alone it may not be as informative as looking at a collection of interactive depth plots. Scanning across the panels, we see each successive target depth increasing, as expected. We also see the interactive variables increasing with increasing target depth. Of interest here is the interaction of lstat
with the rm
variable shown in the rm
panel. Aside from these being the strongest variables by both measures, this interactive measure indicates the strongest connection between variables.
Conditioning plots (coplots) Cleveland (1993) are a powerful visualization tool to efficiently study how a response depends on two or more variables (Cleveland 1993). The method allows us to view data by grouping observations on some conditional membership. The simplest example involves a categorical variable, where we plot our data conditional on class membership, for instance on the Charles river logical variable. We can view a coplot as a stratified variable dependence plot, indicating trends in the RF prediction results within panels of group membership.
Conditional membership with a continuous variable requires stratification at some level. Often we can make these stratification along some feature of the variable, for instance a variable with integer values, or 5 or 10 year age group cohorts. However in the variables of interest in our Boston housing example, we have no “logical” stratification indications. Therefore we will arbitrarily stratify our variables into 6 groups of roughly equal population size using the quantile_pts
function. We pass the break points located by quantile_pts
to the cut
function to create grouping intervals, which we can then add to the gg_variable
object before plotting with the plot.gg_variable
function. The simple modification to convert variable dependence plots into condition variable dependence plots is to use the ggplot2::facet_wrap
command to generate a panel for each grouping interval.
We start by examining the predicted median home value as a function of lstat
conditional on membership within 6 groups of rm
“intervals”.