Introduction to recorder

Lars Kjeldgaard

2019-06-13

recorder 0.8.1 is now available on CRAN. recorder is a lightweight toolkit to validate new observations before computing their corresponding predictions with a predictive model.

With recorder the validation process consists of two steps:

  1. record relevant statistics and meta data of the variables in the original training data for the predictive model
  2. use these data to run a set of basic validation tests on the new set of observations.

Motivation

There can be many data specific reasons, why you might not be confident in the predictions of a predictive model on new data.

Some of them are obvious, e.g.:

Others are more subtle, for instance when observations in new data are not within the “span” of the training data. One example of this could be, when a variable is “N/A” (missing) for a new observation to be predicted, but no missing values appeared for the same variable in the training data. This implies, that the new observation is not within the “span” of the training data. Another way of putting this: the model has never encountered an observation like this before, therefore there is good reason to doubt the quality of the prediction.

recorder workflow

We will need some data in order to demonstrate the recorder workflow. As so many times before the famous iris data set will be used as an example. The data set is divided into training data, that can be used for model development, and new data for predictions after modelling, which we can validate with recordr.

set.seed(1)
trn_idx <- sample(seq_len(nrow(iris)), 100)
data_training <- iris[trn_idx, ]
data_new <- iris[-trn_idx, ]

Record statistics and meta data of variables in training data

What we want to achieve is to validate the new observations (before computing their predictions with a predictive model) based on relevant statistics and meta data of the variables in the training data. Therefore relevant statistics and meta data of the variables must first be learned (recorded) from the trainingdata of the model. This is done with the record() function.

library(recorder)
tape <- record(data_training)
#> 
#> [RECORD]
#> 
#> ... recording meta data and statistics of 100 rows with 5 columns... 
#> 
#> [STOP]

This provides us with an object belonging to the data.tape class. The data.tape contains the statistics and meta data recorded from the training data.

str(tape)
#> List of 2
#>  $ class_variables:List of 5
#>   ..$ Sepal.Length: chr "numeric"
#>   ..$ Sepal.Width : chr "numeric"
#>   ..$ Petal.Length: chr "numeric"
#>   ..$ Petal.Width : chr "numeric"
#>   ..$ Species     : chr "factor"
#>  $ parameters     :List of 5
#>   ..$ Sepal.Length:List of 3
#>   .. ..$ min   : num 4.3
#>   .. ..$ max   : num 7.9
#>   .. ..$ any_NA: logi FALSE
#>   ..$ Sepal.Width :List of 3
#>   .. ..$ min   : num 2
#>   .. ..$ max   : num 4.4
#>   .. ..$ any_NA: logi FALSE
#>   ..$ Petal.Length:List of 3
#>   .. ..$ min   : num 1.1
#>   .. ..$ max   : num 6.9
#>   .. ..$ any_NA: logi FALSE
#>   ..$ Petal.Width :List of 3
#>   .. ..$ min   : num 0.1
#>   .. ..$ max   : num 2.5
#>   .. ..$ any_NA: logi FALSE
#>   ..$ Species     :List of 2
#>   .. ..$ levels: chr [1:3] "setosa" "versicolor" "virginica"
#>   .. ..$ any_NA: logi FALSE
#>  - attr(*, "class")= chr [1:2] "list" "data.tape"

As you see, which meta data and statistics are recorded for the individual variables depends on the class of the given variable, e.g. for a numeric variable min and max values are computed, whilst levels is recorded for factor variables.

Validate new data

First, to spice things up, we will give the new observations a twist by inserting some extreme values and some missing values. On top of that we will create a new column, that was not observed in training data.

# create sample of row indices.
samples <- lapply(1:3, function(x) {
  set.seed(x) 
  sample(nrow(data_new), 5, replace = FALSE)})

# create numeric values without range, -Inf and Inf.
data_new$Sepal.Width[samples[[1]]] <- -Inf
data_new$Petal.Width[samples[[2]]] <- Inf

# insert NA's in numeric vector.
data_new$Petal.Length[samples[[3]]] <- NA_real_

# insert new column.
data_new$junk <- "junk"

Now, we will validate the new observations by running a number of basic validation tests on each of the new observations. The tests are based on the data.tape with the recorded statistics and meta data of variabels in the training data.

You can get an overview over the validation tests with get_tests_meta_data().

get_tests_meta_data()
#>           test_name evaluate_level   evaluate_class
#> 1: missing_variable            col              all
#> 2:   mismatch_class            col              all
#> 3:  mismatch_levels            col           factor
#> 4:     new_variable            col              all
#> 5:    outside_range            row numeric, integer
#> 6:        new_level            row           factor
#> 7:           new_NA            row              all
#> 8:         new_text            row        character
#>                                                    description
#> 1:  variable observed in training data but missing in new data
#> 2: 'class' in new data does not match 'class' in training data
#> 3:    'levels' in new data and training data are not identical
#> 4:      variable observed in new data but not in training data
#> 5:   value in new data outside recorded range in training data
#> 6:           new 'level' in new data compared to training data
#> 7:            NA observed in new data but not in training data
#> 8:              new text in new data compared to training data

To run the tests simply invoke the play() function with the recorded data.tape on the new data.

playback <- play(tape, data_new)
#> 
#> [PLAY]
#> 
#> ... playing data.tape on new data with 50 rows with 6 columns ...
#> 
#> [STOP]

What we actually have here is an object belonging to the new data.playback class.

class(playback)
#> [1] "data.playback" "list"

Great, now let us have a detailed look at the test results with the print() method.

playback
#> 
#> [PLAY]
#> 
#> # of rows in new data: 50
#> # of rows passing all tests: 0
#> # of rows failing one or more tests: 50
#> 
#> Test results (failures):
#> > 'missing_variable': no failures
#> > 'mismatch_class': no failures
#> > 'mismatch_levels': no failures
#> > 'new_variable': junk
#> > 'outside_range': Sepal.Width[row(s): #10, #14, #19, #28, #43],
#> Petal.Length[row(s): #11],
#> Petal.Width[row(s): #8, #10, #28, #35, #44]
#> > 'new_level': no failures
#> > 'new_NA': Petal.Length[row(s): #9, #16, #19, #28, #40]
#> > 'new_text': no failures
#> 
#> Test descriptions:
#> 'missing_variable': variable observed in training data but missing in new data
#> 'mismatch_class': 'class' in new data does not match 'class' in training data
#> 'mismatch_levels': 'levels' in new data and training data are not identical
#> 'new_variable': variable observed in new data but not in training data
#> 'outside_range': value in new data outside recorded range in training data
#> 'new_level': new 'level' in new data compared to training data
#> 'new_NA': NA observed in new data but not in training data
#> 'new_text': new text in new data compared to training data
#> 
#> [STOP]

As you can see, we are in a lot of trouble here. All rows failed, because a new variable (junk), that did not appear in the training data, was suddenly observed in new data. By assumption this invalidates all rows.

Besides from that, some rows failed, because values Inf and -Inf were outside the recorded range in the training data for variables Sepal.Width and Petal.Width. Also, a handful of NA values were encountered in new data for Petal.Length. This is a new phenomenon compared to the training data, where no NA values were observed.

Extract test results

recorder allows you extract the results of the validation tests in a number of ways.

Get failed tests as data.frame

You might want to extract the results as a data.frame with the results of the (failed) tests as columns. To do this, invoke get_failed_tests() on playback:

knitr::kable(head(get_failed_tests(playback), 15))
outside_range.Sepal.Width outside_range.Petal.Length outside_range.Petal.Width new_NA.Petal.Length new_variable.junk
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE TRUE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE
TRUE FALSE TRUE FALSE TRUE
FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE

Get failed tests as character

It can also be useful to get the results of the (failed) tests as a string with one entry per row in new data, where names of the failed tests for the given row are concatenated.

head(get_failed_tests_string(playback))
#> [1] "new_variable.junk;" "new_variable.junk;" "new_variable.junk;"
#> [4] "new_variable.junk;" "new_variable.junk;" "new_variable.junk;"

Get clean rows

As a third option you can extract a logical vector, that indicates which rows, that passed the validation tests.

get_clean_rows(playback)
#>  [1] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> [12] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> [23] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> [34] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> [45] FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE

TRUE means, that a given row is clean and has passed all tests, FALSE on the other hand implies that a given row failed one or more tests.

In this case, all rows are invalid due to the strange column junk, that appears in the new data (you might think, this is a strict rule, but it is consistent nonetheless).

Ignore specific test results

It might be, that the user - for various reasons - wants to ignore one or more of the failed tests. You can handle this easily with recorder, whenever you invoke one of the functions get_clean_rows(), get_failed_tests() or get_failed_tests_string().

Ignore test results from specific tests

Let us assume, that we do not care about, if there is a new column in the new data, that was not observed in the training data. The results of a specific test can be ignored with the ignore_test argument.

Let us try it out and ignore the results of the new_variable validation test.

get_clean_rows(playback, ignore_tests = "new_variable")
#>  [1]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
#> [12]  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE
#> [23]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE
#> [34]  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE FALSE
#> [45]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE

According to this - less restrictive - selection 38 of the new observations are now valid.

Ignore test results from tests of specific columns

Maybe you - for some reason - do not care about the tests results for a specific column. You can ignore results from tests of a specific variable with the ignore_cols argument. Let us go ahead and suppress the test results from tests of the Petal.Length variable.

get_clean_rows(playback, 
               ignore_tests = "new_variable",
               ignore_cols = "Petal.Length")
#>  [1]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE
#> [12]  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE
#> [23]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE
#> [34]  TRUE FALSE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE FALSE FALSE
#> [45]  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE  TRUE

Now, with this modification a total of 42 of the new observations are now valid.

Ignore test results from specific tests of specific columns

It is also possible to ignore the test results of specific tests of specific columns with the ignore_combinations argument. Let us try to ignore the outside_range test, but only for the Sepal.Width variable.

knitr::kable(head(get_failed_tests(playback, 
                                   ignore_tests = "new_variable",
                                   ignore_cols = "Petal.Length",
                                   ignore_combinations = list(outside_range = "Sepal.Width")),
                  15))
outside_range.Petal.Width
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
TRUE
FALSE
TRUE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE
FALSE

As you see - with this additional removal - the only test failures that remain are the ones from the outside_range test of the Petal.Width variable.

That is it, I hope, that you will enjoy the recorder package :)