A template pipeline is provided below using a test dataset. You can read more about the test_data dataset here
Each step of the pipeline has configuration options for experimenting with various methods. These are detailed in the documentation for each method. Notably, the import_docs
, get_cluster_topics
, visualize_clustering
, and evaluate
methods all include the option to save results to a file.
Example Pipeline
Import data
Import and pre-process documents from a text file containing a list of all documents. The ner
option alows users to run clustering over biomedical entities extracted using SciSpacy's en_core_sci_sm model. If that doesn't mean anything to you, just omit that option and clustering will run over words.
import topex.core as topex
data, doc_df = topex.import_from_files('test_data/corpus_file_list.txt', stop_words_file='stop_words.txt',
save_results = False, ner=False)
You can also consolidate your documents into a single, pipe-delimited csv file with the columns "doc_name" and "text".
data, doc_df = topex.import_from_csv('test_data/corpus.txt', stop_words_file='stop_words.txt', save_results = False,
ner=False)
Transform data
Create word vectors from the most expressive phrase in each sentence of the imported documents. Expansion documents can be passed as a single CSV similar to corpus documents in the import step. Options for tfidf_corpus
are ('clustering', 'expansion', 'both')
- Clustering Corpus: The set of documents the user wants to analyze and cluster.
- Expansion Corpus: A set of additional documents uploaded by the user that are either 1) added to the Clustering Corpus to create the TF-IDF, or 2) are the only set of documents used to create the TF-IDF.
- Background Corpus: The set of documents used to create the TF-IDF matrix. Can be composed of 1) only the Clustering Corpus, 2) only the Expansion Corpus, or 3) the concatenation of the Clustering and Expansion Corpus.
tfidf_corpus='both'
tfidf, dictionary = topex.create_tfidf(tfidf_corpus, doc_df, path_to_expansion_file_list='test_data/expansion_file_list.txt')
data = topex.get_phrases(data, dictionary.token2id, tfidf, tfidf_corpus=tfidf_corpus, include_sentiment=True)
data = topex.get_vectors("svd", data, dictionary = dictionary, tfidf = tfidf, dimensions=min(200,tfidf.shape[1]-1))
Cluster data
Cluster the sentences into groups expressing similar ideas or topics. If you aren't sure how many true clusters exist in the data, try running assign_clusters
with the optional parameter show_chart = True
to visual cluster quality with varying numbers of clusters. When using method='hac'
, you can also use show_dendrogram = True
see the cluster dendrogram.
data, linkage_matrix, max_height, height = topex.assign_clusters(data, method = "hac", show_chart = False)
viz_df = topex.visualize_clustering(data, method="umap", show_chart=True, return_data=True)
Cluster size exploration
Determining the correct number of clusters can often be as much art as science, so we've included a mechanism to
quickly iterate through various values of k
or cut heights for the HAC tree. Mapping the data points into the x,y coordinate plane need only be performed once as it depends solely on the vector representation of each sentence and the visualize_clustering
method returns those values in a dataframe, which can be used to quickly redraw the visualization after updating cluster assignments using a different k
or height
. Similarly, computing the tree for HAC clustering can be done once and then cut at different heights to produce different clusters. assign_clusters
returns the linkage_matrix
and max_height
at which you can cut the tree.
Use the recluster
method to experiment with different values of k
or height
. You can also, remove noise from the visualization by setting the min_cluster_size
parameter. This only hides points from the visualization and does not remove them from data
.
data, cluster_df = topex.recluster(data, viz_df, linkage_matrix=linkage_matrix, cluster_method='hac', height=height+1,
min_cluster_size=5, show_chart=False)
gold_file = "test_data/gold.txt"
cluster_df = topex.get_cluster_topics(data, doc_df, save_results = False)
results_df = topex.evaluate(data, gold_file="test_data/gold.txt", save_results = False)
Document Clustering
IMPORTANT: This feature is still in alpha, meaning that we have adapted the pipeline to accomodate the clustering of documents, but have made no rigorous efforts the ensure that it works well.
To cluster documents, simply import data and create the TF-IDF as above, but extract phrase, create the vectors, and cluster using the doc_df
dataframe. Passing the parameter window_size=-1
to get_phrases
tells the method to use all tokens instead of selecting a subset of length window_size
.
tfidf_corpus='both'
doc_df = topex.get_phrases(doc_df, dictionary.token2id, tfidf, tfidf_corpus=tfidf_corpus, window_size=-1)
doc_df = topex.get_vectors("svd", doc_df, dictionary = dictionary, tfidf = tfidf)
doc_df = topex.assign_clusters(doc_df, method = "kmeans", k=4)
cluster_df = topex.get_cluster_topics(data, doc_df, save_results = False)
topex.visualize_clustering(data, method = "umap", show_chart = False)