Practical Machine Learning For The Uninitiated
Last fall when I took on ShippingEasy’s machine learning problem, I had no practical
experience in the field. Getting such a task put on my plate was somewhat terrifying, and even more so as we started to wade into the waters of machine learning. Ultimately, we overcame those obstacles anddelivered
a solution that allowed us to automate our customer’s actions with greater than 95% accuracy. Here are some of the challenges that we experienced when applying machine learning to the shipping & fulfilment domain, and how we broke through them.
Lost in Translation
Machine learning is a subfield of computer science stemming from research into artificial intelligence.[3] It has strong ties to statistics and mathematical optimization, which deliver methods, theory and application domains to the field.
So sayeth the Wikipedia. These roots are where the lexicon of the machine learning stems from. If you have
not been working directly in machine learning, statistics, math or AI, or perhaps your exposure to these are long past, a discussion about machine learning will be hard to follow. Often it is taken for granted that you know what classification, regression,
clustering, supervised, unsupervised, feature vector, sample, over-fitting, binning, banding, density and a host of other terms mean.
As a result, you will be somewhat lost until you can get familiar with this language. Getting a
good book will help. I would recommend Machine Learning, a short course. It clocks in at less than 200 pages, and so is something
that a working professional can consume. Even if you can’t follow everything in the book, reading through it will give you a foundation that will allow you to make use of all the other resources you may find online.
To give you a starting point to building your vocabulary, I will offer a few terms here that will help determine what type of machine learning problem you are dealing with.
Supervised vs Unsupervised Learning: Supervised learning is where you have a set
of input data with known outcomes by which you wish to predict the outcome of future inputs. Our problem at ShippingEasy was
of this type. We had past orders and shipments and needed to predict shipments given future orders. Unsupervised
learning is where you have input data, but no known outcomes. You are searching for what features have meaning within a set of data. If graphed, the data will form clusters around the patterns of meaningful features.
Classification vs Regression: Within supervised learning, there are problems of classification and regression. Classification is
where you wish to determine the class (output) of an input. For instance, predicting what shirt color a person may wear on a given day based on data about what shirts they have worn in the past. The different shirt colors are the classes that you are attempting
to predict.
Regression is where you wish to determine a numeric value given other numeric inputs describing the sample.
For instance, predicting an engineer’s salary based on age and years in the industry. Given enough past data, you could arrive at a statistically relevant salary figure given an arbitrary age and years in the industry (assuming true relationships between age,
years in industry and salary).
Algorithmic Obsession
Once you have a foundation of concepts and language, you can start looking into all of the amazing resources
on the web for machine learning.Stanford’s machine learning videos are great, as are mathematicalmonk’s
youtube videos.
These are fantastic resources for learning how to write machine learning algorithms. But these turned out to not be of much use to me. Not because they are not great, but because the practical application of machine learning is about solving
a domain problem, not writing machine learning algorithms. To make the point, consider this portion of a machine learning algorithm expressed in mathematical notation (which is yet another barrier to the uninitiated):
What does this have to do with the problem you are trying to solve? Absolutely nothing. This is a
description of one portion of an algorithm that may be fed arbitrary data to produce statistically relevant results. It has been implemented by someone smarter than you in
an open source libraryor possibly a service offering that
have been well exercised by a large audience. You could implement it perfectly, and it could produce great results or really bad results. It all depends on the relevancy of the data you feed to it, which brings me to my last point.
Its the Data, Stupid
While there are a tremendous number of resources for how to write machine learning algorithms, there are not many dealing with how to find relevant data within a domain that will allow an algorithm to produce accurate results. This is where you will find that
you have spent most of your time, effort and creativity at the end of an applied machine learning project if you were smart enough to use a good machine learning library or service.
That algorithms dominate the resources for machine learning makes a certain amount of sense. Algorithms
are generic and have practicability for many different scenarios. TheK-Nearest Neighbor algorithm
may be able to predict what movies you would like to watch on Netflix, or it might be able to predict which sex offenders are at high risk for recidivism. These different applications of K-Nearest neighbor would have very different data that needs to be surfaced
from their respective domains and fed to them, however.
There exists an area of machine learning geared towards feature detection, and I won’t dismiss its validity.
I will say, however, that if someone understands the domains of movie consumption and purchasing dynamics or criminal behavior, justice and rehabilitation, they have a leg up in practically applying machine learning to those domains. For even if there is a
statistical correlation between day of the week and movie choices, it does not mean that there is a causative relationship between them. Understanding the domain can help you ascertain if it does.
Some of the data will be obvious. It winds up being a value in a column of a row in the database and it screams its pertinence. Some will be much less obvious and need to be inferred. For instance, for the sex offender recidivism problem, there are probably
a number of criminal incidents, each with a timestamp for when they occurred. For any given person, the amount of time that has passed since their last criminal event, in days, might need to be calculated and included with the data sent to the algorithm. This
‘freshness’ of their criminal activity needs to be inferred from your data, and it may be a key to getting the desired results in predicting future likelihood of behavior. Or it might not.
I think the moral of the story here is that to really apply machine learning in a practical way, being a mathematical or statistical wizard is not the most important element of success. What I feel is more important is having an understanding of the domain
to know what data is relevant and an explorers curiosity to have meaningful hunches and a willingness to explore and vet them. You will need to be comfortable employing something resembling a scientific method – ensuring accuracy is measurable, quantifying
the effects of change, and meticulously exploring isolated changes to discover what data affects a system.
In conclusion
Employing machine learning to solve domain problems can provide huge value to a company
or the public at large. Learning machine learning and how to properly apply it to a domain, however, can be challenging. You will need to develop a knowledge of the fundamentals of machine learning, but do not need to be a computer science, math or statistics
guru to employ it. Leverage existing libs or services, and then focus your efforts on finding the meaningful data within the domain, both obvious and obscure, that will allow satisfactory results to be achieved.