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Encoding Categorical Variables: A Deep Dive into Target Encoding | by Juan Jose Munoz | Feb, 2024


Data comes in different shapes and forms. One of those shapes and forms is known as categorical data.

This poses a problem because most Machine Learning algorithms use only numerical data as input. However, categorical data is usually not a challenge to deal with, thanks to simple, well-defined functions that transform them into numerical values. If you have taken any data science course, you will be familiar with the one hot encoding strategy for categorical features. This strategy is great when your features have limited categories. However, you will run into some issues when dealing with high cardinal features (features with many categories)

Here is how you can use target encoding to transform Categorical features into numerical values.

Photo by Sonika Agarwal on Unsplash

Early in any data science course, you are introduced to one hot encoding as a key strategy to deal with categorical values, and rightfully so, as this strategy works really well on low cardinal features (features with limited categories).

In a nutshell, One hot encoding transforms each category into a binary vector, where the corresponding category is marked as ‘True’ or ‘1’, and all other categories are marked with ‘False’ or ‘0’.

import pandas as pd

# Sample categorical data
data = {'Category': ['Red', 'Green', 'Blue', 'Red', 'Green']}

# Create a DataFrame
df = pd.DataFrame(data)

# Perform one-hot encoding
one_hot_encoded = pd.get_dummies(df['Category'])

# Display the result
print(one_hot_encoded)

One hot encoding output — we could improve this by dropping one column because if we know Blue and Green, we can figure the value of Red. Image by author

While this works great for features with limited categories (Less than 10–20 categories), as the number of categories increases, the one-hot encoded vectors become longer and sparser, potentially leading to increased memory usage and computational complexity, let’s look at an example.

The below code uses Amazon Employee Access data, made publicity available in kaggle: https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/lucamassaron/amazon-employee-access-challenge

The data contains eight categorical feature columns indicating characteristics of the required resource, role, and workgroup of the employee at Amazon.

data.info()
Column information. Image by author
# Display the number of unique values in each column
unique_values_per_column = data.nunique()

print("Number of unique values in each column:")
print(unique_values_per_column)

The eight features have high cardinality. Image by author

Using one hot encoding could be challenging in a dataset like this due to the high number of distinct categories for each feature.

#Initial data memory usage
memory_usage = data.memory_usage(deep=True)
total_memory_usage = memory_usage.sum()
print(f"\nTotal memory usage of the DataFrame: {total_memory_usage / (1024 ** 2):.2f} MB")
The initial dataset is 11.24 MB. Image by author
#one-hot encoding categorical features
data_encoded = pd.get_dummies(data,
columns=data.select_dtypes(include='object').columns,
drop_first=True)

data_encoded.shape

After on-hot encoding, the dataset has 15 618 columns. Image by author
The resulting data set is highly sparse, meaning it contains a lot of 0s and 1. Image by author
# Memory usage for the one-hot encoded dataset
memory_usage = data_encoded.memory_usage(deep=True)
total_memory_usage = memory_usage.sum()
print(f"\nTotal memory usage of the DataFrame: {total_memory_usage / (1024 ** 2):.2f} MB")
Dataset memory usage increased to 488.08 MB due to the increased number of columns. Image by author

As you can see, one-hot encoding is not a viable solution to deal with high cardinal categorical features, as it significantly increases the size of the dataset.

In cases with high cardinal features, target encoding is a better option.

Target encoding transforms a categorical feature into a numeric feature without adding any extra columns, avoiding turning the dataset into a larger and sparser dataset.

Target encoding works by converting each category of a categorical feature into its corresponding expected value. The approach to calculating the expected value will depend on the value you are trying to predict.

For Regression problems, the expected value is simply the average value for that category.

For Classification problems, the expected value is the conditional probability given that category.

In both cases, we can get the results by simply using the ‘group_by’ function in pandas.

#Example of how to calculate the expected value for Target encoding of a Binary outcome
expected_values = data.groupby('ROLE_TITLE')['ACTION'].value_counts(normalize=True).unstack()
expected_values
The resulting table indicates the probability of each `ACTION` outcome by unique `Role_title` ID. Image by author

The resulting table indicates the probability of each “ACTION” outcome by unique “ROLE_TITLE” id. All that is left to do is replace the “ROLE_TITLE” id with the values from the probability of “ACTION” being 1 in the original dataset. (i.e instead of category 117879 the dataset will show 0.889331)

While this can give us an intuition of how target encoding works, using this simple method runs the risk of overfitting. Especially for rare categories, as in those cases, target encoding will essentially provide the target value to the model. Also, the above method can only deal with seen categories, so if your test data has a new category, it won’t be able to handle it.

To avoid those errors, you need to make the target encoding transformer more robust.

To make target encoding more robust, you can create a custom transformer class and integrate it with scikit-learn so that it can be used in any model pipeline.

NOTE: The below code is taken from the book “The Kaggle Book” and can be found in Kaggle: https://www.kaggle.com/code/lucamassaron/meta-features-and-target-encoding

import numpy as np
import pandas as pd

from sklearn.base import BaseEstimator, TransformerMixin

class TargetEncode(BaseEstimator, TransformerMixin):

def __init__(self, categories='auto', k=1, f=1,
noise_level=0, random_state=None):
if type(categories)==str and categories!='auto':
self.categories = [categories]
else:
self.categories = categories
self.k = k
self.f = f
self.noise_level = noise_level
self.encodings = dict()
self.prior = None
self.random_state = random_state

def add_noise(self, series, noise_level):
return series * (1 + noise_level *
np.random.randn(len(series)))

def fit(self, X, y=None):
if type(self.categories)=='auto':
self.categories = np.where(X.dtypes == type(object()))[0]

temp = X.loc[:, self.categories].copy()
temp['target'] = y
self.prior = np.mean(y)
for variable in self.categories:
avg = (temp.groupby(by=variable)['target']
.agg(['mean', 'count']))
# Compute smoothing
smoothing = (1 / (1 + np.exp(-(avg['count'] - self.k) /
self.f)))
# The bigger the count the less full_avg is accounted
self.encodings[variable] = dict(self.prior * (1 -
smoothing) + avg['mean'] * smoothing)

return self

def transform(self, X):
Xt = X.copy()
for variable in self.categories:
Xt[variable].replace(self.encodings[variable],
inplace=True)
unknown_value = {value:self.prior for value in
X[variable].unique()
if value not in
self.encodings[variable].keys()}
if len(unknown_value) > 0:
Xt[variable].replace(unknown_value, inplace=True)
Xt[variable] = Xt[variable].astype(float)
if self.noise_level > 0:
if self.random_state is not None:
np.random.seed(self.random_state)
Xt[variable] = self.add_noise(Xt[variable],
self.noise_level)
return Xt

def fit_transform(self, X, y=None):
self.fit(X, y)
return self.transform(X)

It might look daunting at first, but let’s break down each part of the code to understand how to create a robust Target encoder.

Class Definition

class TargetEncode(BaseEstimator, TransformerMixin):

This first step ensures that you can use this transformer class in scikit-learn pipelines for data preprocessing, feature engineering, and machine learning workflows. It achieves this by inheriting the scikit-learn classes BaseEstimator and TransformerMixin.

Inheritance allows the TargetEncode class to reuse or override methods and attributes defined in the base classes, in this case, BaseEstimator and TransformerMixin

BaseEstimator is a base class for all scikit-learn estimators. Estimators are objects in scikit-learn with a “fit” method for training on data and a “predict” method for making predictions.

TransformerMixin is a mixin class for transformers in scikit-learn, it provides additional methods such as “fit_transform”, which combines fitting and transforming in a single step.

Inheriting from BaseEstimator & TransformerMixin, allows TargetEncode to implement these methods, making it compatible with the scikit-learn API.

Defining the constructor

def __init__(self, categories='auto', k=1, f=1, 
noise_level=0, random_state=None):
if type(categories)==str and categories!='auto':
self.categories = [categories]
else:
self.categories = categories
self.k = k
self.f = f
self.noise_level = noise_level
self.encodings = dict()
self.prior = None
self.random_state = random_state

This second step defines the constructor for the “TargetEncode” class and initializes the instance variables with default or user-specified values.

The “categories” parameter determines which columns in the input data should be considered as categorical variables for target encoding. It is Set by default to ‘auto’ to automatically identify categorical columns during the fitting process.

The parameters k, f, and noise_level control the smoothing effect during target encoding and the level of noise added during transformation.

Adding noise

This next step is very important to avoid overfitting.

def add_noise(self, series, noise_level):
return series * (1 + noise_level *
np.random.randn(len(series)))

The “add_noise” method adds random noise to introduce variability and prevent overfitting during the transformation phase.

“np.random.randn(len(series))” generates an array of random numbers from a standard normal distribution (mean = 0, standard deviation = 1).

Multiplying this array by “noise_level” scales the random noise based on the specified noise level.”

This step contributes to the robustness and generalization capabilities of the target encoding process.

Fitting the Target encoder

This part of the code trains the target encoder on the provided data by calculating the target encodings for categorical columns and storing them for later use during transformation.

def fit(self, X, y=None):
if type(self.categories)=='auto':
self.categories = np.where(X.dtypes == type(object()))[0]

temp = X.loc[:, self.categories].copy()
temp['target'] = y
self.prior = np.mean(y)
for variable in self.categories:
avg = (temp.groupby(by=variable)['target']
.agg(['mean', 'count']))
# Compute smoothing
smoothing = (1 / (1 + np.exp(-(avg['count'] - self.k) /
self.f)))
# The bigger the count the less full_avg is accounted
self.encodings[variable] = dict(self.prior * (1 -
smoothing) + avg['mean'] * smoothing)

The smoothing term helps prevent overfitting, especially when dealing with categories with small samples.

The method follows the scikit-learn convention for fit methods in transformers.

It starts by checking and identifying the categorical columns and creating a temporary DataFrame, containing only the selected categorical columns from the input X and the target variable y.

The prior mean of the target variable is calculated and stored in the prior attribute. This represents the overall mean of the target variable across the entire dataset.

Then, it calculates the mean and count of the target variable for each category using the group-by method, as seen previously.

There is an additional smoothing step to prevent overfitting on categories with small numbers of samples. Smoothing is calculated based on the number of samples in each category. The larger the count, the less the smoothing effect.

The calculated encodings for each category in the current variable are stored in the encodings dictionary. This dictionary will be used later during the transformation phase.

Transforming the data

This part of the code replaces the original categorical values with their corresponding target-encoded values stored in self.encodings.

def transform(self, X):
Xt = X.copy()
for variable in self.categories:
Xt[variable].replace(self.encodings[variable],
inplace=True)
unknown_value = {value:self.prior for value in
X[variable].unique()
if value not in
self.encodings[variable].keys()}
if len(unknown_value) > 0:
Xt[variable].replace(unknown_value, inplace=True)
Xt[variable] = Xt[variable].astype(float)
if self.noise_level > 0:
if self.random_state is not None:
np.random.seed(self.random_state)
Xt[variable] = self.add_noise(Xt[variable],
self.noise_level)
return Xt

This step has an additional robustness check to ensure the target encoder can handle new or unseen categories. For those new or unknown categories, it replaces them with the mean of the target variable stored in the prior_mean variable.

If you need more robustness against overfitting, you can set up a noise_level greater than 0 to add random noise to the encoded values.

The fit_transform method combines the functionality of fitting and transforming the data by first fitting the transformer to the training data and then transforming it based on the calculated encodings.

Now that you understand how the code works, let’s see it in action.

#Instantiate TargetEncode class
te = TargetEncode(categories='ROLE_TITLE')
te.fit(data, data['ACTION'])
te.transform(data[['ROLE_TITLE']])
Output with Target encoded Role title. Image by author

The Target encoder replaced each “ROLE_TITLE” id with the probability of each category. Now, let’s do the same for all features and check the memory usage after using Target Encoding.

y = data['ACTION']
features = data.drop('ACTION',axis=1)

te = TargetEncode(categories=features.columns)
te.fit(features,y)
te_data = te.transform(features)

te_data.head()

Output, Target encoded features. Image by author
memory_usage = te_data.memory_usage(deep=True)
total_memory_usage = memory_usage.sum()
print(f"\nTotal memory usage of the DataFrame: {total_memory_usage / (1024 ** 2):.2f} MB")
The resulting dataset only uses 2.25 MB, compared to 488.08 MB from the one-hot encoder. Image by author

Target encoding successfully transformed the categorical data into numerical without creating extra columns or increasing memory usage.

So far we have created our own target encoder class, however you don’t have to do this anymore.

In scikit-learn version 1.3 release, somewhere around June 2023, they introduced the Target Encoder class to their API. Here is how you can use target encoding with Scikit Learn

from sklearn.preprocessing import TargetEncoder

#Splitting the data
y = data['ACTION']
features = data.drop('ACTION',axis=1)

#Specify the target type
te = TargetEncoder(smooth="auto",target_type='binary')
X_trans = te.fit_transform(features, y)

#Creating a Dataframe
features_encoded = pd.DataFrame(X_trans, columns = features.columns)

Output from sklearn Target Encoder transformation. Image by author

Note that we are getting slightly different results from the manual Target encoder class because of the smooth parameter and randomness on the noise level.

As you see, sklearn makes it easy to run target encoding transformations. However, it is important to understand how the transformation works under the hood first to understand and explain the output.

While Target encoding is a powerful encoding method, it’s important to consider the specific requirements and characteristics of your dataset and choose the encoding method that best suits your needs and the requirements of the machine learning algorithm you plan to use.

[1] Banachewicz, K. & Massaron, L. (2022). The Kaggle Book: Data Analysis and Machine Learning for Competitive Data Science. Packt>

[2] Massaron, L. (2022, January). Amazon Employee Access Challenge. Retrieved February 1, 2024, from https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/lucamassaron/amazon-employee-access-challenge

[3] Massaron, L. Meta-features and target encoding. Retrieved February 1, 2024, from https://www.kaggle.com/luca-massaron/meta-features-and-target-encoding

[4] Scikit-learn.sklearn.preprocessing.TargetEncoder. In scikit-learn: Machine learning in Python (Version 1.3). Retrieved February 1, 2024, from https://scikit-learn.org/stable/modules/generated/sklearn.preprocessing.TargetEncoder.html



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