In this example, the
variables SES and URBANICITY are class variables for which the value
?
denotes a missing value. Because a question mark
does not denote a missing value in the terms that SAS defines a missing
value (that is, a blank or a period), SAS Enterprise Miner sees it
as an additional level of a class variable. However, the knowledge
that these values are missing will be useful later in the model-building
process.
To use the Replacement
node to interactively specify that such observations of these
variables are missing:
-
Select the
Modify tab on the Toolbar.
-
Select the Replacement
node icon. Drag the node into the Diagram Workspace.
-
Connect the Data Partition
node to the Replacement node.
-
Select the Replacement
node. In the Properties Panel, scroll down to view the Train properties.
-
For interval variables,
click on the value of
Default Limits Method, and select
None from the drop-down menu
that appears. This selection indicates that no values of interval
variables should be replaced. With the default selection, a particular
range for the values of each interval variable would have been enforced.
In this example, you do not want to enforce such a range.
Note: In this data set, all missing
interval variable values are correctly coded as SAS missing values
(a blank or a period).
-
For class variables,
click on the ellipses that represent the value of
Replacement
Editor. The Replacement Editor opens.
-
Notice that SES and URBANICITY
both have a level that contains observations with the value
?
. In the case of these two variables, this level
represents observations with missing values. Enter
_MISSING_
as the
Replacement Value for the two rows. This action enables SAS Enterprise Miner to see
that the question marks indicate missing values for these two variables.
Later, you will impute values for observations with missing values.
-
Enter
_UNKNOWN_
as the
Replacement Value for the level of
DONOR_GENDER that has the value
A
.
This value is the result of a data entry error, and you do not know
whether the intention was to code it as an
F
or an
M
.
-
In the Diagram Workspace,
right-click the Replacement node, and select
Run from the resulting menu. Click
Yes in the
confirmation window that opens.
-
In the window that appears
when processing completes, click
OK.
Note: In the data that is exported
from the Replacement node, a new variable is created for each variable
that is replaced (in this example, SES, URBANICITY, and DONOR_GENDER).
The original variable is not overwritten. Instead, the new variable
has the same name as the original variable but is prefaced with REP_.
The original version of each variable also exists in the exported
data and has the role
Rejected
.
Tip
To view the data that is exported
by a node, click the ellipses that represent the value of the General
property
Exported Data in the Properties
Panel. To view the exported variables, click
Properties in the window that opens, and then view the
Variables tab. Similarly, you can view the data that is imported and used
by a node by clicking the ellipses that represent the value of the
General property
Imported Data in the Properties
Panel.