This document discusses visualizing data in a three-dimensional plot where the feature 1-feature 2 plane matches a previous two-dimensional plot, with labels represented by both color and position on the three axes. It suggests that fitting a plane through this three-dimensional data could predict labels for any input parameters, and returning to the two-dimensional view, fitting such a plane to the data results in the visualization shown in Figure 5-6.
This document discusses visualizing data in a three-dimensional plot where the feature 1-feature 2 plane matches a previous two-dimensional plot, with labels represented by both color and position on the three axes. It suggests that fitting a plane through this three-dimensional data could predict labels for any input parameters, and returning to the two-dimensional view, fitting such a plane to the data results in the visualization shown in Figure 5-6.
This document discusses visualizing data in a three-dimensional plot where the feature 1-feature 2 plane matches a previous two-dimensional plot, with labels represented by both color and position on the three axes. It suggests that fitting a plane through this three-dimensional data could predict labels for any input parameters, and returning to the two-dimensional view, fitting such a plane to the data results in the visualization shown in Figure 5-6.
This document discusses visualizing data in a three-dimensional plot where the feature 1-feature 2 plane matches a previous two-dimensional plot, with labels represented by both color and position on the three axes. It suggests that fitting a plane through this three-dimensional data could predict labels for any input parameters, and returning to the two-dimensional view, fitting such a plane to the data results in the visualization shown in Figure 5-6.
Notice that the feature 1–feature 2 plane here is the same as in the two-
dimensional plot from before; in
this case, however, we have represented the labels by both color and three- dimensional axis position. From this view, it seems reasonable that fitting a plane through this three- dimensional data would allow us to predict the expected label for any set of input parameters. Returning to the two-dimensional projection, when we fit such a plane we get the result shown in Figure 5-6 .