treeheatr displays a more interpretable decision tree visualization by integrating a heatmap at its terminal nodes. Let’s explore the package treeheatr a little deeper and see what it can do!
with the penguins dataset! Running the heat_tree()
function can be as simple as:
# To avoid warnings, for now, apply na.omit():
penguins <- na.omit(penguins)
heat_tree(penguins, target_lab = 'species')
But we can adjust a few graphical parameters. We can also add a
custom layout for a subset of the nodes by specifying it in the
custom_layout
parameter. And we can relax the p value
threshold p_thres
to include more features that might be
less important in classifying the samples but still included in the
decision tree, or set show_all_feats = TRUE
to include all
features, even the ones that were not used to build the tree.
heat_tree(
penguins, target_lab = 'species',
target_cols = c('#E69F00', '#56B4E9', '#009E73'),
# moving node 3 a bit to the left:
custom_layout = data.frame(id = 3, x = 0.1, y = 0.5),
show_all_feats = TRUE,
panel_space = 0.05, target_space = 0.2, tree_space_bottom = 0.1, heat_rel_height = 0.4)
We can also customize our heattree by passing parameters through to
different ggparty geoms. These list parameters are
named *_vars
. For example:
heat_tree(
penguins, target_lab = 'species',
par_node_vars = list(
label.size = 0.2,
label.padding = ggplot2::unit(0.1, 'lines'),
line_list = list(
ggplot2::aes(label = paste('Node', id)),
ggplot2::aes(label = splitvar),
ggplot2::aes(label = paste('p =', formatC(p.value, format = 'e', digits = 2)))),
line_gpar = list(
list(size = 8),
list(size = 8),
list(size = 6)),
id = 'inner'),
# terminal_vars = list(size = 0),
cont_legend = TRUE, cate_legend = TRUE,
edge_vars = list(size = 1, color = 'grey'))
What if we only want to show the decision tree? We can toggle this
option using the show
argument, which takes either
'heat-tree'
, 'heat-only'
or
'tree-only'
. For example:
We can also choose to display other features in the heatmap that may not be in the tree.
feats = NA
displays the tree with only the target label,
which may be simple and still helpful:
heat_tree()
Anyone got that Food Wishes reference?
If the default conditional tree is not desired, you can create your
tree (e.g. with rpart
) and wrap as.party()
around this object to plug into heat_tree()
. As an example,
we will examine the datasets of COVID-19 cases in Wuhan from 2020-01-10
to 2020-02-18 from a recent study.
partysplit
and
partynode
You can also manually define your own tree for the
custom_tree
argument following the partykit
vignette. Let’s apply the tree structure in Figure
2 of the original study (only show the training set for now):
library(partykit)
# first argument indicates the index of the feature used for splitting
split_ldh <- partysplit(1L, breaks = 365)
split_crp <- partysplit(2L, breaks = 41.2)
split_lymp <- partysplit(3L, breaks = 14.7)
custom_tree <- partynode(1L, split = split_ldh , kids = list(
partynode(2L, split = split_crp, kids = list(
partynode(3L, info = 'Survival'),
partynode(4L, split = split_lymp, kids = list(
partynode(5L, info = 'Death'),
partynode(6L, info = 'Survival'))))),
partynode(7L, info = 'Death')))
heat_tree(
x = custom_tree,
data_test = train_covid,
print_eval = FALSE,
target_lab = 'Outcome',
label_map = c(`1` = 'Deceased', `0` = 'Survived'))
You can print measures evaluating the conditional decision tree’s
performance by setting print_eval = TRUE
. By defaults, we
show 5 measures for classification tasks:
and 4 measures for regression tasks:
You can also choose to show performance based on any other set of appropriate metrics listed on the yardstick reference page, for example, with
as a heat_tree
argument to show the F score (a
combination of precision and recall).
Warning: We do not recommend print_eval
on the training set because these measures may gives you an
over-optimistic view of how the tree performs (this would show pure
training accuracy, not cross-validated).
Let’s now apply the custom tree we (or really, Yan et al.) designed earlier and see how it performs on the test set:
In general, compared to classification, regression task is more difficult to interpret with a decision tree. However, a heatmap may shed some light on how the tree groups the samples in different terminal nodes. Also, removing the terminal node label may show the groups better. Here’s an example:
These extreme visualizations may not be very interpretable but serves
the purpose of showing the ability to generalize of the node layout when
the tree grows in size. The implemented smart layout weighs the
x-position of the parent node according to the level of the child nodes
as to avoid crossing of tree branches. This relative weight can be
adjusted with the lev_fac
parameter in
heat_tree()
. The default lev_fac = 1.3
seems
to provide aesthetically pleasing trees, independent of the tree
size.
In this next figure, on the top, lev_fac = 1
makes
parent node perfectly in the middle of child nodes (note a few branch
crossing), which contrasts lev_fac = 1.3
(default) on the
bottom.
Unless you turn it off (clust_feats = FALSE
,
clust_samps = FALSE
), treeheatr
automatically performs grouping of features and samples when organizing
the heatmap. Features are ordered within each of the two groups of
features, continuous and categorical (including the target label, unless
clust_target = FALSE
). Samples are grouped within each
terminal node of all features (not only the displayed features).
treeheatr uses cluster::daisy()
to compute
distances with the Gower metric to incorporate both continuous and
nominal categorical feature types. Now, cluster::daisy()
may throw this warning if your dataset contains binary features:
binary variable(s) treated as interval scaled
but in general this is safe to ignore because the goal of seriation is to simply reduce the amount of stochasticity of the tree-based model and not to make precise inference about each group.
As shown above in the penguins example, treeheatr supports mixed feature types.
For continuous variables/features, we can choose to either percentize (scale-rank), normalize (subtract the min and divide by the max) or scale (subtract the mean and divide by the standard deviation) each feature. Depending on what we want to show in the heatmap, one transformation method can be more effective than the other. Details on the strengths and weaknesses of different types of data transformation for heatmap display can be found in this vignette of the heatmaply package.
We highly recommend that, when dealing with mixed feature types, the
user supply feat_types
to indicate whether a feature should
be considered ‘numeric’ (continuous) or ‘factor’ (categorical) as shown
below. When feat_types
is not specified,
treeheatr automatically inferred each column type from
the original dataset.