Moran's I : Data Science Concepts

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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 57

  • @sigurorton6287
    @sigurorton6287 2 года назад +23

    Killed it. One of the best explanation of Moran's I I've come across.

  • @meganrussell9728
    @meganrussell9728 Год назад +2

    The one and only explanation I have come across that actually explains this concept from a spatial perspective.

  • @taniotanev1918
    @taniotanev1918 4 года назад +8

    A negative spatial correlation natural example is the way passengers take seats in public transport. They tend to try to sit away from each other with even spacing.

  • @karimvaliev8031
    @karimvaliev8031 Год назад

    The greatest explanation I’ve ever heard. Respect man.

  • @yannikwohnsdorf8944
    @yannikwohnsdorf8944 Год назад +1

    you have a teaching gift! thanks for explaining and uploading!

  • @rifatamanna7895
    @rifatamanna7895 4 года назад +4

    Instead of just showing formula building the understanding through example......your way of teaching is identical👍👍☺

  • @tapfumapashapa9798
    @tapfumapashapa9798 Год назад

    Well Done. I commented before I read any comment. This is a good explanation.

  • @谢润志
    @谢润志 Год назад +1

    Really great and intuitive explanation of it, thank you! 👍

  • @jaeyeollee9243
    @jaeyeollee9243 4 года назад +2

    Huge respect for sharing your precious knowledge making it so approachable

  • @anjanaaji1863
    @anjanaaji1863 Год назад

    Thank you so much ur way of teaching ...

  • @igorzambiassi6841
    @igorzambiassi6841 2 года назад +1

    I'm working on my final paper about Spatial Econometrics and your explanation helped me a lot! But I think it's worth explaining the contiguity criterion: I'm used to using the Queen criterion instead of the Rook, and it confused me a lot.

  • @mozhganchamani4248
    @mozhganchamani4248 4 года назад +1

    The concepts beyond formula are very interesting which are elaborated perfectly by you, thank you 👍

  • @KXYZ32
    @KXYZ32 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for uploading. Very crystal.

  • @runrunrun6517
    @runrunrun6517 10 месяцев назад

    before watch this video I just understand how to calculate moran i using Python. Now I understand how it works!!

  • @TheTunamouse
    @TheTunamouse 3 года назад +1

    This was so incredibly clear, thank you so much!

  • @golibsanaev
    @golibsanaev 3 года назад

    Very clear explanation. Thank you!

  • @ramiismael7502
    @ramiismael7502 3 года назад +2

    can you use graph to build a deeper understanding?

  • @pankajsingh6921
    @pankajsingh6921 2 года назад

    thanks for the explanation. this is what i was looking for. thanks again.

  • @teegnas
    @teegnas 4 года назад +2

    reminds of something in the intersection of Voronoi diagrams + clustering + Sammon's projection

    • @ritvikmath
      @ritvikmath  4 года назад

      Cool! I'll have to look into those topics

  • @NickKravitz
    @NickKravitz 4 года назад +1

    Great video! but you didn't answer the initial question.. what is the Moran's I for the 2016 election? My home city of NYC has a negative Moran's I - the poorest county in New York State (Bronx) borders on the richest (Manhattan). Every town in Queens houses a different ethnic group.

  • @yulinliu850
    @yulinliu850 2 года назад

    👍👍👍👍

  • @gezahagnnegash9740
    @gezahagnnegash9740 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing

  • @coltonlapp4193
    @coltonlapp4193 6 месяцев назад

    A potential example of negative spatial correlation - the location of retail stores? If there is a retail store from a chain that isn't highly correlated, the surrounding area probably has a lower rate of retail stores?

  • @raduandreinegrila215
    @raduandreinegrila215 4 года назад +1

    A negative spatial correlation natural example might be a bunch of mountain peaks/ranges with valleys in between

    • @ritvikmath
      @ritvikmath  4 года назад +1

      Good point! Thanks

    • @raduandreinegrila215
      @raduandreinegrila215 4 года назад

      @@ritvikmath much obliged. Thank you for the clear explanations!

    • @anttirask7877
      @anttirask7877 3 года назад

      What about the chess board? Would that be a good example of this or am I totally off?

  • @caothanhlong7577
    @caothanhlong7577 2 года назад

    It's super intuitive.

  • @haolunshan5092
    @haolunshan5092 2 года назад

    super clear, very makesense

  • @shirok2460
    @shirok2460 3 года назад

    I was starting with watching Luc Anselin. He might teach something to you, but you teach something to me!

  • @TheSnowsore
    @TheSnowsore 4 года назад +1

    Your video is very helpful. Woud you mind translating the video and uploading it to a Chinese video website? Because we can’t use RUclips in China, I hope my friends can learn from it too.

  • @paulglombick4634
    @paulglombick4634 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks!

  • @s.c.1903
    @s.c.1903 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @runrunrun6517
    @runrunrun6517 10 месяцев назад

    can you do a video about local moran's i?

  • @JK-sy4ym
    @JK-sy4ym 6 месяцев назад

    Genius

  • @aa-yi9zu
    @aa-yi9zu 3 года назад

    Thank you so much!

  • @julianunland6618
    @julianunland6618 2 года назад

    How would you recommend computing Morans I for Vectors with values from [0,1]?
    My first idea was to just subtract x_i with x_mean and take the length of that vector. The problem here is, that its not possible to get a negative value for the length, which leads into getting bad value to interpret. Second idea, is to just compute Morans I for every entry in our vector independent from another and taking the mean of these. Is there any better way?

  • @brianacervantes7850
    @brianacervantes7850 3 года назад

    thank you so much for this video! you're a fantastic teacher. I do have one question: is it possible to end up with a positive, but small value for Moran's I that is statistically significant?
    if so, is there a difference in how you would interpret a larger positive value versus a smaller positive value if both are statistically significant?

  • @FersotJ
    @FersotJ 4 года назад

    Unless I don't know what borders are, I believe the I for the 2016 election is about 0.317, so pretty strongly physically correlated.
    This is using the naive weighting average above which is like the L_0 norm or something.

    • @ritvikmath
      @ritvikmath  4 года назад

      Nice! Thanks for the info. Curious what it will be for this year.

  • @yellowrasta1460
    @yellowrasta1460 3 года назад

    Thanks man...

  • @deepaksurya776
    @deepaksurya776 4 года назад +1

    Please talk about how A/B testing is used in Data science. Thanks

    • @ritvikmath
      @ritvikmath  4 года назад

      Interesting idea! I will look into it. Thanks!

  • @lovelyjain9485
    @lovelyjain9485 2 года назад

    Can we report p-value from Moran's I value

  • @kamyaryazdani8800
    @kamyaryazdani8800 3 года назад

    that is boss

  • @sgifford1000
    @sgifford1000 4 года назад +1

    An example of Morans's I = 0 would be people who like to eat liver or durian fruit.

  • @sgifford1000
    @sgifford1000 4 года назад

    On second thought that is not correct since there is clustering.

  • @sgifford1000
    @sgifford1000 4 года назад

    I live in FL and Moran's I would be about 0 (that is equal democrats and republicans). How ever, republicans cluster in the center of the state versus the coastline. Micro vs. macro have different results.