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I have a problem with PCA. I read that PCA needs clean numeric values. I started my analysis with a dataset called trainDf with shape (1460, 79).

I did my data cleaning and processing by removing empty values, imputing and dropping columns and I got a dataframe transformedData with shape (1458, 69).

Data cleaning steps are:

  1. LotFrontage imputing with mean value
  2. MasVnrArea imputing with 0s (less than 10 cols)
  3. Ordinal encoding for categorical columns
  4. Electrical imputing with most frequent value

I found outliers with IQR and got withoutOutliers with shape (1223, 69).

After this, I looked at histograms and decided to apply PowerTransformer on some features and StandardScaler on others and I got normalizedData.

Now I tried doing PCA and I got this:

pca = PCA().fit(transformedData)

print(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())

plt.plot(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())
plt.xlabel('number of components')
plt.ylabel('cumulative explained variance')

the output of this PCA is the following:

[0.67454179 0.8541084  0.98180307 0.99979932 0.99986346 0.9999237
 0.99997091 0.99997985 0.99998547 0.99999044 0.99999463 0.99999719
 0.99999791 0.99999854 0.99999909 0.99999961 0.99999977 0.99999988
 0.99999994 0.99999998 0.99999999 1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.        ]

PCA1

Then I tried:

pca = PCA().fit(withoutOutliers)

print(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())

plt.plot(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())
plt.xlabel('number of components')
plt.ylabel('cumulative explained variance')

out:

[0.68447278 0.86982875 0.99806386 0.99983727 0.99989606 0.99994353
 0.99997769 0.99998454 0.99998928 0.99999299 0.9999958  0.99999775
 0.99999842 0.99999894 0.99999932 0.99999963 0.9999998  0.9999999
 0.99999994 0.99999998 0.99999999 1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.         1.         1.         1.
 1.         1.         1.        ]

PCA2

Finally:

pca = PCA().fit(normalizedData)

print(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())

plt.plot(pca.explained_variance_ratio_.cumsum())
plt.xlabel('number of components')
plt.ylabel('cumulative explained variance')

Out:

[1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1.
 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1.
 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1.]

PCA3

How is it possible that the last execution gives such an output?

Here are data distributions

transformedData

transformedData hist

withoutOutliers

withoutOutliers hist

normalizedData

normalizedData hist

I'll add any further data if necessary, thanks in advance to any who can help!

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    $\begingroup$ You may need to normalize the (entire) data. stats.stackexchange.com/questions/69157/… $\endgroup$
    – Peter
    Feb 3, 2022 at 20:17
  • $\begingroup$ The PowerTransformer already do it, and the rest of the data are already on scale $\endgroup$
    – Kalizi
    Feb 3, 2022 at 21:02
  • $\begingroup$ @Peter i added histograms about the data I have, any tips? $\endgroup$
    – Kalizi
    Feb 4, 2022 at 10:34
  • $\begingroup$ Again: you did not put the variables on the same scale stats.stackexchange.com/questions/385775/… $\endgroup$
    – Peter
    Feb 4, 2022 at 11:37
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ Really happy to help and thx for your reply. I‘ll add a proper anser. $\endgroup$
    – Peter
    Feb 7, 2022 at 22:41

1 Answer 1

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With PCA it is really important to put all (!) features on the same scale using standardization, e.g. using standard.scaler, i.e. having mean 0 and standard deviation 1.

Also see this and this posts.

The reason for this is that PCA looks at the variance explained by the different features. So in order to make the features comparable, standardization is required.

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