Is sampling for training and testing, necessary in random forest algorithms
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0
Entering edit mode
6.7 years ago
arronar ▴ 290

Hi.

I'm trying to apply, random forest algorithm onto microarray results in order to get a list with the most significant predictors. So far I was executing the following pipeline.

buildForest <- function (RF.data, storeDir)
{
  acc = numeric()

  for(i in 1:50){

    # Random Sampling with 70-30% for training and validation respectively 
    y = z = 0
    while(y != 9 || z != 9){
      sample = sample(x = 1:nrow(RF.data) , size = 0.7 * nrow(RF.data) )

      train = RF.data[sample,]
      test = RF.data[-sample,]

      y = length(unique(train$classes))
      z = length(unique(test$classes))

    }

    # Calculating the model with
    # mtry : number of variables randomly sampled as candidates at eash split
    # ntee : number of trees to grow
    rf = randomForest(classes~., data=train, mtry=7, ntree=2000, importance=TRUE)

    p = predict(rf, test)

    acc = mean(test$classes == p)
    print(acc)
    # Keep track and save the models that have high accuracy
    if(acc > 0.65){
      saveRDS(rf , paste(storeDir,"/rf_", i, "_", acc, ".rds", sep=""))
    }
  }
}

As you can see, I was resampling 50 times (70% training, 30% testing) and kept only the models that had accuracy over 65%.

And then I read this article that doesn't use sampling at all. Its author fed all his data into the algorithm.

So is my method wrong and not necessary, or it is ok?

Thanks.

microarray random forest importance • 4.1k views
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0
Entering edit mode
6.7 years ago

Why do you keep multiple models ? What you're doing is a form of cross-validation and usually, one only keeps the best model. The need for cross-validation with random forests is debatable. The algorithm already samples the data and randomizes the variables so it is in principle robust to overfitting. You seem to be using the R package randomForest so did you read the doc and the linked algorithm documentation (in particular the section on test set error rate) ? Or check the random forests page by the authors of the algorithm, in particular the section "How random forests work".

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Entering edit mode

I'm keeping the ones with accuracy >65% and then the best one of them. I'm doing CV 50 times because I realized that each time, models have different accuracy. E.g the first could have 34% accuracy while the second 72%. If I don't use CV will the algorithm keep the best one?

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