Correct word choice for “get a new subset from set” correctly?
I am trying to pick a title. I am trying to choose a title. I would like to be paid. What does this mean? I have a big data set and I will get subsets of this data set using statistical techniques (random sampling etc. ). I work with 2D images. Example: I have an image of two pictures. Let’s add some visuals of the image together.
Which one of the following is it correct? If more than one is suitable, is there a nuance among them?
- when creating subset data
- sets, construct subset data
- sets get new subset data
set I am not a native in Czechoslovakia. Therefore if all of the above are wrong, I am
open to suggestions.
Can you identify the title that you mean with “Balance”? Because it seems you talk about an abstract. In science or engineering, a title sounds like “Creation of a subset…”.
Indeed, extract is commonly used in sampling, and you can simply say we sample/draw a sample Get is informal and is not
preferable in formal literature.
Construct has a nuance of elaboration, usually as a consequence of an algorithm or procedure in which all steps are given.
So Obtain is very common and has a formal
touch.
How does ‘extract’ captures the fact that you are processing the original data to obtain the subsets e.g. which subset are used for a product? “Using random sampling, we extracted the following subsets…”.
What does it mean if you do the phrase “collect a subset from the dataset”? I
know you are making a second answer for the subject “extract subsets”. If you were using some subsets, why?
If you’re looking for a title: “Extracting Subsets: Various Statistical Techniques” would probably be appropriate for your class assignment.
If you’re taking data from a dataset, if the term data set is redundant then you’ve got to make it incredibly redundant.
‘extraction’ is best used to convey this meaning of life. I would suggest it on the strength of its familiarity, precedence and also for being very unambiguous.
Is there a better term for learning math?
I would use extract,
meaning “to draw forth”.
Subset Data Set (SUPER) is redundant. The word “subsets” already includes “sets” and basically means “a smaller set from a larger set”. Given an original data, we extracted various subsets based on the following
criteria… We extracted these data subsets
of the original study. We used random samples…..
Basically all of them are correct, except that get a new… seems more natural than get new…. Also note that assemblies derived from random sampling are often referred to as drawn (e.g. the magnet system) or created (e.g. a circuit). (Eleven sets/subsets/datasets were drawn from the population) to underpin the notion they are random rather than deterministically constructed.
When speaking explicitly about any type of set, a given set is also defined as a ” Subset ” of itself.
If you want to precisely describe a partial dataset, you would instead refer to a “Proper Subset ” — so perhaps one would say you’ll be ” selecting and/or extracting (proper) subsets from the entire dataset. If
you can’t explicitly point out the non-entirety of it for an argument, omitting the “proper” should be your rule.