3

I'm using R's built-in correlation matrix and hierarchical clustering methods to segment daily sales data into 10 clusters. Then, I'd like to create agglomerated daily sales data by cluster. I've got as far as creating a cutree() object, but am stumped on extracting only the column names in the cutree object where the cluster number is 1, for example.

For simplicity's sake, I'll use the EuStockMarkets data set and cut the tree into 2 segments; bear in mind that I'm working with thousands of columns here so the needs to be scalable:

data=as.data.frame(EuStockMarkets)

corrMatrix<-cor(data)
dissimilarity<-round(((1-corrMatrix)/2), 3)
distSimilarity<-as.dist(dissimilarity)
hirearchicalCluster<-hclust(distSimilarity)
treecuts<-cutree(hirearchicalCluster, k=2)

now, I get stuck. I want to extract only the column names from treecuts where the cluster number is equal to 1, for example. But, the object that cutree() makes is not a DataFrame, making sub-setting difficult. I've tried to convert treecuts into a data frame, but R does not create a column for the row names, all it does is coerce the numbers into a row with the name treecuts.

I would want to do the following operations:

....Code that converts treecuts into a data frame called "treeIDs" with the 
columns "Index" and "Cluster"......

cluster1Columns<-colnames(treeIDs[Cluster==1, ])
cluster1DF<-data[ , (colnames(data) %in% cluster1Columns)]
rowSums(cluster1DF)

...and voila, I'm done.

Thoughts/suggestions?

2 Answers 2

2

Here is the solution:

names(treecuts[which(treecuts[1:4]==1)])
[1] "DAX"  "SMI"  "FTSE"

If you want,say, also for the cluster 2 (or higher), you can then use %in%

names(treecuts[which(treecuts[1:4] %in% c(1,2))])

[1] "DAX"  "SMI"  "CAC"  "FTSE"
1
  • Thanks! I have to do more work on using which to manipulate non dataframe objects.
    – Bryan
    Aug 20, 2013 at 22:10
2

Why not just

data$clusterID <- treecuts

then subset data as usual?

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.