-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 42
/
29-regularization.qmd
620 lines (404 loc) · 23.2 KB
/
29-regularization.qmd
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
# Regularization
## Case study: recommendation systems {#sec-recommendation-systems}
* During its initial years of operation, Netflix used a 5-star recommendation system.
* One star suggests it is not a good movie, whereas five stars suggests it is an excellent movie.
* Here, we provide the basics of how these recommendations are made, motivated by some of the approaches taken by the winners of the _Netflix challenges_.
* In October 2006, Netflix offered a challenge to the data science community: improve our recommendation algorithm by 10% and win a million dollars.
* In September 2009,
the winners were announced^[http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/21/netflix-awards-1-million-prize-and-starts-a-new-contest/].
* You can read a summary of how the winning algorithm was put together here: [http://blog.echen.me/2011/10/24/winning-the-netflix-prize-a-summary/](http://blog.echen.me/2011/10/24/winning-the-netflix-prize-a-summary/)
* and a more detailed explanation here:
[https://www2.seas.gwu.edu/~simhaweb/champalg/cf/papers/KorenBellKor2009.pdf](https://www2.seas.gwu.edu/~simhaweb/champalg/cf/papers/KorenBellKor2009.pdf).
* We will now show you some of the data analysis strategies used by the winning team.
### Movielens data
* The Netflix data is not publicly available, but the GroupLens research lab^[https://grouplens.org/] generated their own database with over 20 million ratings for over 27,000 movies by more than 138,000 users.
* We make a small subset of this data available via the __dslabs__ package:
```{r, warning=FALSE, message=FALSE, echo=FALSE}
library(tidyverse)
library(janitor)
library(dslabs)
movielens |> as_tibble() |> head(5)
```
* Each row represents a rating given by one user to one movie.
* We can see the number of unique users that provided ratings and how many unique movies were rated:
```{r}
movielens |> summarize(n_distinct(userId), n_distinct(movieId))
```
* Not every user rated every movie. So we can think of these data as a very large matrix, with users on the rows and movies on the columns, with many empty cells.
* Here is the matrix for six users and four movies.
```{r, echo=FALSE}
keep <- movielens |>
dplyr::count(movieId) |>
top_n(4, n) |>
pull(movieId)
tab <- movielens |>
filter(movieId %in% keep) |>
filter(userId %in% c(13:20)) |>
select(userId, title, rating) |>
mutate(title = str_remove(title, ", The"),
title = str_remove(title, ":.*")) |>
pivot_wider(names_from = "title", values_from = "rating")
if (knitr::is_html_output()) {
knitr::kable(tab, "html") |>
kableExtra::kable_styling(bootstrap_options = "striped", full_width = FALSE)
} else{
knitr::kable(tab, "latex", booktabs = TRUE) |>
kableExtra::kable_styling(font_size = 8)
}
```
* You can think of the task of a recommendation system as filling in the `NA`s in the table above.
* To see how _sparse_ the matrix is, here is the matrix for a random sample of 100 movies and 100 users with yellow indicating a user/movie combination for which we have a rating.
```{r sparsity-of-movie-recs, echo=FALSE, fig.width=3, fig.height=3, out.width="40%"}
users <- sample(unique(movielens$userId), 100)
rafalib::mypar()
movielens |>
filter(userId %in% users) |>
select(userId, movieId, rating) |>
mutate(rating = 1) |>
pivot_wider(names_from = movieId, values_from = rating) |>
(\(mat) mat[, sample(ncol(mat), 100)])() |>
as.matrix() |>
t() |>
image(1:100, 1:100, z = _ , xlab = "Movies", ylab = "Users")
```
* Let's look at some of the general properties of the data to better understand the challenges.
* Here is the distribution of number of ratins for each movie.
```{r movie-id-and-user-hists, echo=FALSE, fig.width=6, fig.height=3}
p1 <- movielens |>
count(movieId) |>
ggplot(aes(n)) +
geom_histogram(bins = 30, color = "black") +
scale_x_log10() +
ggtitle("Movies")
p2 <- movielens |>
count(userId) |>
ggplot(aes(n)) +
geom_histogram(bins = 30, color = "black") +
scale_x_log10() +
ggtitle("Users")
gridExtra::grid.arrange(p1, p2, ncol = 2)
```
* We need to build an algorithm with the collected data that will then be applied outside our control, as users look for movie recommendations.
* So let's create a test set to assess the accuracy of the models we implement.
* We then split the data into a training set and test set by assigning 20% of the ratings made by each user to the test set:
```{r, message=FALSE, warning=FALSE}
set.seed(2006)
indexes <- split(1:nrow(movielens), movielens$userId)
test_ind <- sapply(indexes, function(i) sample(i, ceiling(length(i)*.2))) |>
unlist() |>
sort()
test_set <- movielens[test_ind,]
train_set <- movielens[-test_ind,]
```
* To make sure we don't include movies that are not in both test and train sets, we remove entries using the `semi_join` function:
```{r}
test_set <- test_set |> semi_join(train_set, by = "movieId")
train_set <- train_set |> semi_join(test_set, by = "movieId")
```
* We use `pivot_wider` to make a matrix with users represented by rows and movies by the columns
```{r}
y_train <- select(train_set, movieId, userId, rating) |>
pivot_wider(names_from = movieId, values_from = rating) |>
column_to_rownames("userId") |>
as.matrix()
y_test <- select(test_set, movieId, userId, rating) |>
pivot_wider(names_from = movieId, values_from = rating) |>
column_to_rownames("userId") |>
as.matrix()
y_test <- y_test[rownames(y_train), colnames(y_train)]
```
* Finally, we create table to map movie ids to titles:
```{r}
movie_map <- train_set |> select(movieId, title) |> distinct(movieId, .keep_all = TRUE)
```
## Loss function {#sec-netflix-loss-function}
* The Netflix challenge decided on a winner based on the root mean squared error (RMSE) computed on the test set. We define $y_{u,i}$ as the rating for movie $i$ by user $u$ **in the test set** and denote the prediction, obtained from the training set, with $\hat{y}_{u,i}$. We then define the residuals as:
$$
r_{u,i} = y_{u,i} - \hat{y}_{u,i}
$$
* The metric used by the competion was defined as:
$$
\mbox{RMSE} = \sqrt{\frac{1}{N} \sum_{u,i}^{} r_{u,i}^2 }
$$
* with $N$ being the number of user/movie combinations for which we made predictions and the sum occurring over all these combinations.
* We can interpret the RMSE similarly to a standard deviation: it is the typical error we make when predicting a movie rating.
* If this number is larger than 1, it means our typical error is larger than one star, which is not good.
* We define a function to compute this quantity for any set of residuals:
```{r}
rmse <- function(r) sqrt(mean(r^2, na.rm = TRUE))
```
* In this chapter and the next we introduce two concepts, regularization and matrix factorization, that were used by the winners of the Netflix challenge to obtain lowest RMSE.
:::{.callout-note}
We later provide a formal discussion of the mean squared error.
:::
## A first model
* First model
$$
Y_{u,i} = \mu + \varepsilon_{u,i}
$$
with $\varepsilon_{i,u}$ independent errors sampled from the same distribution centered at 0 and $\mu$ the _true_ rating for all movies.
* We know that the estimate that minimizes the RMSE is the least squares estimate of $\mu$ and, in this case, is the average of all ratings:
```{r}
mu <- mean(y_train, na.rm = TRUE)
mu
```
* If we predict all unknown ratings with $\hat{\mu}$ we obtain the following RMSE:
```{r}
rmse(y_test - mu)
```
```{r}
#| echo: false
rmse0 <- rmse(y_test - mu)
```
* Keep in mind that if you plug in any other number, you get a higher RMSE. For example:
```{r}
rmse(y_test - 4)
```
* From looking at the distribution of ratings, we can visualize that this is the standard deviation of that distribution.
* We get a RMSE of about 1. To win the grand prize of $1,000,000, a participating team had to get an RMSE of about 0.857.
* So we can definitely do better!
## Modeling movie effects
* We can use a linear models with a _treatment effect_ $b_i$ for each movie, which can be interpreted as movie effect or the difference between the average ranking for movie $i$ and the overall average $\mu$:
$$
Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + \varepsilon_{u,i}
$$
* Statistics textbooks refer to the $b$s as treatment effects, however in the Netflix challenge papers they refer to them as _bias_, thus the $b$ notation.
* We can again use least squares to estimate the $b_i$ in the following way:
```{r, eval=FALSE}
fit <- lm(rating ~ as.factor(movieId), data = train_set)
```
* Because there are thousands of $b_i$ as each movie gets one, the `lm()` function will be very slow here.
* We don't recommend running the code above.
* Instead, we leverage the fact that in this particular situation, we know that the least squares estimate $\hat{b}_i$ is just the average of $Y_{u,i} - \hat{\mu}$ for each movie $i$.
* So we can compute them this way:
```{r}
b_i <- colMeans(y_train - mu, na.rm = TRUE)
```
* Note that we drop the `hat` notation in the code to represent estimates going forward.
* We can see that these estimates vary substantially:
```{r movie-effects}
hist(b_i)
```
* Remember $\hat{\mu}=3.5$ so a $b_i = 1.5$ implies a perfect five star rating.
* Let's see how much our prediction improves once we use $\hat{y}_{u,i} = \hat{\mu} + \hat{b}_i$:
```{r}
rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i))
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
rmse1 <- rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i))
```
* We already see an improvement. But can we make it better?
## User effects
* Let's compute the average rating for user $u$ for those that have rated 100 or more movies:
```{r user-effect-hist}
b_u <- rowMeans(y_train, na.rm = TRUE)
hist(b_u, nclass = 30)
```
* Notice that there is substantial variability across users
as well: some users are very cranky and others love most movies.
* This implies that a further improvement to our model may be:
$$
Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + b_u + \varepsilon_{u,i}
$$
where $b_u$ is a user-specific effect.
* Now if a cranky user (negative $b_u$) rates a great movie (positive $b_i$), the effects counter each other and we may be able to correctly predict that this user gave this great movie a 3 rather than a 5.
* To fit this model, we could again use `lm` like this:
```{r, eval = FALSE}
lm(rating ~ as.factor(movieId) + as.factor(userId), data = train_set)
```
* However, for the reasons described earlier, we won't run this code.
* Instead, we will compute an approximation by computing $\hat{\mu}$ and $\hat{b}_i$ and estimating $\hat{b}_u$ as the average of $y_{u,i} - \hat{\mu} - \hat{b}_i$:
```{r}
b_u <- rowMeans(sweep(y_train - mu, 2, b_i), na.rm = TRUE)
```
* We can now construct predictors and see how much the RMSE improves:
```{r}
rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i) - b_u)
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
rmse2 <- rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i) - b_u)
```
## Penalized least squares
* If we look at the top movies, based on our estimates of the movie effect $b_i$ we find that they are all movies rated three or less times:
```{r}
colSums(!is.na(y_train[, mu + b_i == 5])) |> table()
```
* These are the names of those rated more than three times along with the score in the test set:
```{r}
ind <- which(b_i + mu == 5 & colSums(!is.na(y_train)) > 1)
titles <- filter(movie_map, movieId %in% colnames(y_train)[ind]) |> pull(title)
setNames(colMeans(y_test[,ind], na.rm = TRUE), titles)
```
* These all seem like obscure movies. Do we really think these are the top movies in our database?
* Note that the prediction does not hold on the test set.
* These supposed _best_ movies were rated by very few users and small sample sizes lead to uncertainty.
* Therefore, larger estimates of $b_i$, negative or positive, are more likely. Therefore, these are noisy estimates that we should not trust, especially when it comes to prediction. Large errors can increase our RMSE, so we would rather be conservative when unsure.
* In previous sections, we computed standard error and constructed confidence intervals to account for different levels of uncertainty.
* However, when making predictions, we need one number, one prediction, not an interval. For this, we introduce the concept of regularization.
* Regularization permits us to penalize large estimates that
are formed using small sample sizes.
* It has commonalities with the
Bayesian approach that shrunk predictions described in the Bayesian models section.
* The general idea behind regularization is to constrain the total variability of the effect sizes.
* Why does this help? Consider a case in which we have movie $i=1$ with 100 user ratings and 4 movies $i=2,3,4,5$ with just one user rating. We intend to fit the model
$$
Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + \varepsilon_{u,i}
$$
* Suppose we know the average rating is, say, $\mu = 3$.
* If we use least squares, the estimate for the first movie effect $b_1$ is the average of the 100 user ratings, $1/100 \sum_{i=1}^{100} (Y_{i,1} - \mu)$, which we expect to be a quite precise.
* However, the estimate for movies 2, 3, 4, and 5 will simply be the observed deviation from the average rating $\hat{b}_i = Y_{u,i} - \hat{\mu}$ which is an estimate based on just one number so it won't be precise at all.
* Note these estimates make the error $Y_{u,i} - \mu + \hat{b}_i$ equal to 0 for $i=2,3,4,5$, but we don't expect to be this lucky next time, when asked to predict.
* In fact, ignoring the one user and guessing that movies 2,3,4, and 5 are just average movies ($b_i = 0$) might provide a better prediction.
* The general idea of penalized regression is to control the total variability of the movie effects: $\sum_{i=1}^5 b_i^2$.
* Specifically, instead of minimizing the least squares equation, we minimize an equation that adds a penalty:
$$
\sum_{u,i} \left(y_{u,i} - \mu - b_i\right)^2 + \lambda \sum_{i} b_i^2
$$
* The first term is just the sum of squares and the second is a penalty that gets larger when many $b_i$s are large.
* Using calculus we can actually show that the values of $b_i$ that minimize this equation are:
$$
\hat{b}_i(\lambda) = \frac{1}{\lambda + n_i} \sum_{u=1}^{n_i} \left(Y_{u,i} - \hat{\mu}\right)
$$
where $n_i$ is the number of ratings made for movie $i$.
* This approach will have our desired effect: when our sample size $n_i$ is very large, a case which will give us a stable estimate, then the penalty $\lambda$ is effectively ignored since $n_i+\lambda \approx n_i$.
* However, when the $n_i$ is small, then the estimate $\hat{b}_i(\lambda)$ is shrunken towards 0. The larger $\lambda$, the more we shrink.
* But how do we select $\lambda$? We will later learn about cross-validation which can be used to do this.
* Here we will simply compute the RMSE we for different values of $\lambda$ to illustrate the effect:
```{r}
n <- colSums(!is.na(y_train))
sums <- colSums(y_train - mu, na.rm = TRUE)
lambdas <- seq(0, 10, 0.1)
rmses <- sapply(lambdas, function(lambda){
b_i <- sums / (n + lambda)
rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i))
})
```
* Here is a plot of the RMSE versus $\lambda$:
```{r best-penalty}
plot(lambdas, rmses, type = "l")
```
* The minimum is obtained for $\lambda=$ `r lambdas[which.min(rmses)]`
* Using this$\lambda$ we can compute the regularized estimates and add to our table of estimates:
```{r}
lambda <- lambdas[which.min(rmses)]
b_i_reg <- colSums(y_train - mu, na.rm = TRUE) / (n + lambda)
```
* To see how the estimates shrink, let's make a plot of the regularized estimates versus the least squares estimates.
```{r regularization-shrinkage, fig.asp=0.8, echo=FALSE}
data.frame(Original = b_i, Regularized = b_i_reg) |>
ggplot(aes(Original, Regularized, size = sqrt(n))) +
geom_point(shape = 1, alpha = 0.5) +
geom_abline()
```
* Now, let's look at the top 5 best movies based on the penalized estimates $\hat{b}_i(\lambda)$:
```{r, echo=FALSE}
ind <- order(b_i_reg, decreasing = FALSE)[1:15]
titles <- filter(movie_map, movieId %in% colnames(y_train)[ind]) |> pull(title)
setNames(colMeans(y_test[,ind], na.rm = TRUE), titles)
```
* These make much more sense! These movies are watched more and have more ratings in the training set:
```{r}
setNames(colSums(!is.na(y_test[,ind])), titles)
```
* We also see that our RMSE is improved if we use our regularized estimates of the movie effects:
```{r}
b_u <- rowMeans(sweep(y_train - mu, 2, b_i_reg), na.rm = TRUE)
rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i_reg) - b_u)
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
rmse3 <- rmse(sweep(y_test - mu, 2, b_i_reg) - b_u)
```
```{r echo=FALSE}
rmse_results <- tibble(model = c("Just the mean", "Movie effect", "Movie + user effect",
"Regularized movie + user effect"),
RMSE = c(rmse0, rmse1, rmse2, rmse3))
```
* The penalized estimates provide an improvement over the least squares estimates:
```{r, echo=FALSE}
knitr::kable(rmse_results, "html") |>
kableExtra::kable_styling(bootstrap_options = "striped", full_width = FALSE)
```
## Exercises
(@) For the `movielens` data, compute the number of ratings for each movie and then plot it against the year the movie came out. Use the square root transformation on the counts.
(@) We see that, on average, movies that came out after 1993 get more ratings. We also see that with newer movies, starting in 1993, the number of ratings decreases with year: the more recent a movie is, the less time users have had to rate it.
Among movies that came out in 1993 or later, what are the 25 movies with the most ratings per year? Also report their average rating.
(@) From the table constructed in the previous example, we see that the most rated movies tend to have above average ratings. This is not surprising: more people watch popular movies. To confirm this, stratify the post 1993 movies by ratings per year and compute their average ratings. Make a plot of average rating versus ratings per year and show an estimate of the trend.
(@) The `movielens` dataset also includes a time stamp. This variable represents the time and data in which the rating was provided. The units are seconds since January 1, 1970. Create a new column `date` with the date. Hint: use the `as_datetime` function in the __lubridate__ package.
(@) Compute the average rating for each week and plot this average against day. Hint: use the `round_date` function before you `group_by`.
```{r}
library(lubridate)
movielens |>
mutate(week = round_date(as_datetime(movielens$timestamp), unit = "week")) |>
group_by(week) |>
summarize(avg = mean(rating)) |>
ggplot(aes(week, avg)) +
geom_line()
```
(@) The `movielens` data also has a `genres` column. This column includes every genre that applies to the movie. Some movies fall under several genres. Define a category as whatever combination appears in this column. Keep only categories with more than 1,000 ratings. Then compute the average and standard error for each category. Plot these as error bar plots.
(@) The plot shows strong evidence of a genre effect. If we define $g_{u,i}$ as the genre for user's $u$ rating of movie $i$, which of the following models is most appropriate:
a. $Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + b_u + d_{u,i} + \varepsilon_{u,i}$.
b. $Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + b_u + d_{u,i}\beta + \varepsilon_{u,i}$.
c. $Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + b_u + \sum_{k=1}^K x_{u,i} \beta_k + \varepsilon_{u,i}$, with $x^k_{u,i} = 1$ if $g_{u,i}$ is genre $k$.
d. $Y_{u,i} = \mu + b_i + b_u + f(d_{u,i}) + \varepsilon_{u,i}$, with $f$ a smooth function of $d_{u,i}$.
An education expert is advocating for smaller schools. The expert bases this recommendation on the fact that among the best performing schools, many are small schools. Let's simulate a dataset for 100 schools. First, let's simulate the number of students in each school.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
set.seed(1986)
n <- round(2^rnorm(1000, 8, 1))
```
Now let's assign a _true_ quality for each school completely independent from size. This is the parameter we want to estimate.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
mu <- round(80 + 2 * rt(1000, 5))
range(mu)
schools <- data.frame(id = paste("PS",1:100),
size = n,
quality = mu,
rank = rank(-mu))
```
We can see that the top 10 schools are:
```{r, eval=FALSE}
schools |> top_n(10, quality) |> arrange(desc(quality))
```
Now let's have the students in the school take a test. There is random variability in test taking so we will simulate the test scores as normally distributed with the average determined by the school quality and standard deviations of 30 percentage points:
```{r, eval=FALSE}
scores <- sapply(1:nrow(schools), function(i){
scores <- rnorm(schools$size[i], schools$quality[i], 30)
scores
})
schools <- schools |> mutate(score = sapply(scores, mean))
```
(@) What are the top schools based on the average score? Show just the ID, size, and the average score.
(@) Compare the median school size to the median school size of the top 10 schools based on the score.
(@) According to this test, it appears small schools are better than large schools. Five out of the top 10 schools have 100 or fewer students. But how can this be? We constructed the simulation so that quality and size are independent. Repeat the exercise for the worst 10 schools.
(@) The same is true for the worst schools! They are small as well. Plot the average score versus school size to see what's going on. Highlight the top 10 schools based on the _true_ quality. Use the log scale transform for the size.
(@) We can see that the standard error of the score has larger variability when the school is smaller. This is a basic statistical reality we learned in the probability and inference sections. In fact, note that 4 of the top 10 schools are in the top 10 schools based on the exam score.
Let's use regularization to pick the best schools. Remember regularization _shrinks_ deviations from the average towards 0. So to apply regularization here, we first need to define the overall average for all schools:
```{r, eval=FALSE}
overall <- mean(unlist(scores))
```
and then define, for each school, how it deviates from that average. Write code that estimates the score above average for each school but dividing by $n + \lambda$ instead of $n$, with $n$ the school size and $\lambda$ a regularization parameter. Try $\lambda = 3$.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
lambda <- 3
schools <- schools |>
mutate(sum = sapply(scores, sum)) |>
mutate(score_reg = mu + (sum - size*mu)/(size + lambda))
```
(@) Notice that this improves things a bit. The number of small schools that are not highly ranked is now 4. Is there a better $\lambda$? Find the $\lambda$ that minimizes the RMSE = $1/100 \sum_{i=1}^{100} (\mbox{quality} - \mbox{estimate})^2$.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
lambdas <- seq(0, 50, 0.1)
rmses <- sapply(lambdas, function(lambda){
schools |>
mutate(sum = sapply(scores, sum)) |>
mutate(score_reg = mu + (sum - size*mu)/(size + lambda)) |>
summarize(mean(score_reg - quality)^2)
})
plot(lambdas, rmses, type = "l")
```
(@) Rank the schools based on the average obtained with the best $\lambda$. Note that few small schools are incorrectly included in the top.
```{r, eval=FALSE}
lambda <- lambdas[which.min(rmses)]
schools <- schools |>
mutate(sum = sapply(scores, sum)) |>
mutate(score_reg = mu + (sum - size*mu)/(size + lambda))
schools |> arrange(desc(score))
```
(@) A common mistake to make when using regularization is shrinking values towards 0 that are not centered around 0. For example, if we don't subtract the overall average before shrinking, we actually obtain a very similar result. Confirm this by re-running the code from exercise 6 but without removing the overall mean.