How to use CountVectorizer in R ?

Manish Saraswat

2022-05-23

In this tutorial, we’ll look at how to create bag of words model (token occurence count matrix) in R in two simple steps with superml. Superml borrows speed gains using parallel computation and optimised functions from data.table R package. Bag of words model is often use to analyse text pattern using word occurences in a given text.

Install

You can install latest cran version using (recommended):

install.packages("superml")

You can install the developmemt version directly from github using:

devtools::install_github("saraswatmks/superml")

Caveats on superml installation

For machine learning, superml is based on the existing R packages. Hence, while installing the package, we don’t install all the dependencies. However, while training any model, superml will automatically install the package if its not found. Still, if you want to install all dependencies at once, you can simply do:

install.packages("superml", dependencies=TRUE)

Sample Data

First, we’ll create a sample data. Feel free to run it alongside in your laptop and check the computation.

library(superml)
#> Loading required package: R6

# should be a vector of texts
sents <-  c('i am going home and home',
          'where are you going.? //// ',
          'how does it work',
          'transform your work and go work again',
          'home is where you go from to work')

# generate more sentences
n <- 10
sents <- rep(sents, n) 
length(sents)
#> [1] 50

For sample, we’ve generated 50 documents. Let’s create the features now. For ease, superml uses the similar API layout as python scikit-learn.

# initialise the class
cfv <- CountVectorizer$new(max_features = 10, remove_stopwords = FALSE)

# generate the matrix
cf_mat <- cfv$fit_transform(sents)

head(cf_mat, 3)
#>      work home you where going go and your transform to
#> [1,]    0    2   0     0     1  0   1    0         0  0
#> [2,]    0    0   1     1     1  0   0    0         0  0
#> [3,]    1    0   0     0     0  0   0    0         0  0

Few observations:

Now, let’s generate the matrix using its ngram_range features.

# initialise the class
cfv <- CountVectorizer$new(max_features = 10, remove_stopwords = FALSE, ngram_range = c(1, 3))

# generate the matrix
cf_mat <- cfv$fit_transform(sents)

head(cf_mat, 3)
#>      work home you where going go and your work and your work your
#> [1,]    0    2   0     0     1  0   1             0         0    0
#> [2,]    0    0   1     1     1  0   0             0         0    0
#> [3,]    1    0   0     0     0  0   0             0         0    0

Few observations:

Usage for a Machine Learning Model

In order to use Count Vectorizer as an input for a machine learning model, sometimes it gets confusing as to which method fit_transform, fit, transform should be used to generate features for the given data. Here’s a way to do:


library(data.table)
library(superml)

# use sents from above
sents <-  c('i am going home and home',
          'where are you going.? //// ',
          'how does it work',
          'transform your work and go work again',
          'home is where you go from to work',
          'how does it work')

# create dummy data
train <- data.table(text = sents, target = rep(c(0,1), 3))
test <- data.table(text = sample(sents), target = rep(c(0,1), 3))

Let’s see how the data looks like:

head(train, 3)
#>                           text target
#> 1:    i am going home and home      0
#> 2: where are you going.? ////       1
#> 3:            how does it work      0
head(test, 3)
#>                                     text target
#> 1: transform your work and go work again      0
#> 2:              i am going home and home      1
#> 3:           where are you going.? ////       0

Now, we generate features for train-test data:

# initialise the class
cfv <- CountVectorizer$new(max_features = 12, remove_stopwords = FALSE, ngram_range = c(1,3))

# we fit on train data
cfv$fit(train$text)

train_cf_features <- cfv$transform(train$text)
test_cf_features <- cfv$transform(test$text)

dim(train_cf_features)
#> [1]  6 12
dim(test_cf_features)
#> [1]  6 12

We generate 12 features for each of the given data. Let’s see how they look:

head(train_cf_features, 3)
#>      work home you where it work it how does it how does how going go
#> [1,]    0    2   0     0       0  0           0        0   0     1  0
#> [2,]    0    0   1     1       0  0           0        0   0     1  0
#> [3,]    1    0   0     0       1  1           1        1   1     0  0
#>      does it work
#> [1,]            0
#> [2,]            0
#> [3,]            1
head(test_cf_features, 3)
#>      work home you where it work it how does it how does how going go
#> [1,]    2    0   0     0       0  0           0        0   0     0  1
#> [2,]    0    2   0     0       0  0           0        0   0     1  0
#> [3,]    0    0   1     1       0  0           0        0   0     1  0
#>      does it work
#> [1,]            0
#> [2,]            0
#> [3,]            0

Finally, to train a machine learning model on this, you can simply do:


# ensure the input to classifier is a data.table or data.frame object
x_train <- data.table(cbind(train_cf_features, target = train$target))
x_test <- data.table(test_cf_features)


xgb <- RFTrainer$new(n_estimators = 10)
xgb$fit(x_train, "target")

predictions <- xgb$predict(x_test)
predictions
#> [1] 1 0 1 0 1 1
#> Levels: 0 1

Summary

In this tutorial, we discussed how to use superml’s countvectorizer (also known as bag of words model) to create word counts matrix and train a machine learning model on it.