School of Computing and Information Systems
The University of Melbourne
COMP30027, Machine Learning, 2023
Project 2: Book Rating Prediction
Task: Build a classifier to predict the rating of books
Due: Group Registration: Friday 5 May, 5pm
Stage I: Friday 19 May, 5pm
Stage II: Friday 26 May, 5pm
Submission: Stage I: Report (PDF) and code to Canvas; test outputs to Kaggle in-class competition
Stage II: Peer reviews and reflection to Canvas
Marks: The Project will be marked out of 20, and will contribute 20% of your total mark.
Groups: Groups of 1 or 2, with commensurate expectations for each (see Sections 2 and 5).
1 Overview
The goal of this Project is to build and critically analyse supervised Machine Learning methods to predict the
ratings of books based on their titles, authors, descriptions and other features. There are three levels of rating,
3, 4 and 5, for each book.
This assignment aims to reinforce the largely theoretical lecture concepts surrounding data representation, classifier construction, evaluation and error analysis, by applying them to an open-ended problem. You will also
have an opportunity to practice your general problem-solving skills, written communication skills, and critical
thinking skills.
2 Deliverables
This project has two stages. The deliverables of each stage are listed as follows. More details about deliverables
are given in the Submission (Section 5).
Stage I:
1. Report: an anonymous written report, of 1,300-1,800 words (for a group of one person) or 2,000-2,500
words (for a group of two people).
2. Output: the output of your classifiers, comprising the label predictions for test instances, submitted to
the Kaggle1
in-class competition described below.
3. Code: one or more programs, written in Python, which implement machine learning models to make
predictions and evaluate the results.
Stage II:
1. Peer review: reviews of two reports written by other students, 200-300 words each (for a group of one
person) or 300-400 words each (for a group of two people).
2. Reflection: a written reflection piece of 400 words. This deliverable is individual work.
1https://www.kaggle.com/
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3 Data
The information of book is collected from Goodreads2
, which is a platform that allows users to search its
database of books, rate books and write reviews. The data files for this project are available via Canvas, and are
described in a corresponding README.
In our dataset, each book contains:
• Book features: name, authors, publish year, publish month, publish day, publisher,
language, page numbers, and description.
• Text features: produced by various text encoding methods for name, authors, and description.
Each text feature is provided as a single file with rows corresponding to the file of book features.
• Class label: the rating of a book rating label (3 possible levels, 3, 4 or 5)
You will be provided with a training set and a test set. The training set contains the book features, text features,
and the rating label, which is the “class label” of our task. The test set only contains the book and text
features without labels.
The files provided are:
• book rating train.csv: the book features and class label of training instances.
• book rating test.csv: the book features of test instances.
• book text features *.zip: the preprocessed text features for training and test sets, 1 zipped file for each
text encoding method. Details about using these text features are provided in README.
4 Task
You are expected to develop Machine Learning models to predict the rating of a book based on its features (e.g.
name, authors, description, publish year etc.). You will explore effective features, implement and compare
different machine learning models and conduct error analysis for this task.
Various machine learning techniques have been (or will be) discussed in this subject (0R, Naive Bayes, Decision
Trees, kNN, SVM, neural network, etc.); many more exist. You may use any machine learning method you
consider suitable for this problem. You are strongly encouraged to make use of machine learning software
and/or existing libraries (such as sklearn) in your attempts at this project.
In addition to different learning algorithms, there are many different ways to encode text for these algorithms.
The files in book text features *.zip are some possible representations of the name, authors and description of
books we have provided. For example, one of the encoding method is CountVectorizer in sklearn,
which converts text documents into “Bag of Words” – the documents are described by word occurrences while
ignoring the relative position information of the words. You can use these representations to develop your
classifiers, but please also feel free to extract your own features from the raw book features according to your
needs. Just keep in mind that any data representation you use for the text in the training set will need to be able
to generalise to the test set.
You are expected to complete the following two phases for this task:
• Training-evaluation phase: the holdout or cross-validation approaches can be applied on the training
data provided.
• Test phase: the trained classifiers will be evaluated on the unlabelled test data. The predicted labels of
test cases should be submitted as part of the Stage I deliverable.
2https://www.goodreads.com/
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5 Submission
The report, code, peer reviews and reflections should be submitted via Canvas; the predictions on test data
should be submitted to Kaggle.
5.1 Individual vs. Team Participation
You have the option of participating individually, or in a group of two. In the case that you opt to participate
individually, you will be required to implement at least 2 and up to 4 distinct Machine Learning models.
Groups of two will be required to implement at least 4 and up to 5 distinct Machine Learning models, of
which one is to be an ensemble model – stacking based on the other models. The report length requirement also
differs, as detailed below:
Group size Distinct models required Report length
1 2–4 1,300–1,800 words
2 4–5 2,000–2,500 words
Group Registration
If you wish to form a group of 2, only one of the members needs to register by Friday 5 May 5:00pm, via the
form “Project 2 Group Registration” on Canvas. For a group of 2, only one of the members needs to submit
deliverables.
Note that once you have signed up for a given group, you will not be allowed to change groups. If you do not
register before the deadline above, we will assume that you will be completing the assignment as an individual,
even if you were in a two-person group for Assignment 1.
5.2 Stage I: Report
You report is expected to demonstrate the knowledge that you have gained and the critical analysis you have
conducted in a manner that is accessible to a reasonably informed reader.
The report should be 1,300-1,800 words (individual) or 2,000-2,500 words (groups of two people) in length
excluding reference list, figure captions and tables. The report should include the following sections:
1. Introduction: a basic description of the task and a short summary of your report.
2. Methodology: what you have done, including any learners that you have used, and features that you have
engineered. This should be at a conceptual level; a detailed description of the code is not appropriate for
the report. The description should be similar to what you would see in a machine learning conference
paper.
3. Results: performance of your classifiers, in terms of evaluation metric(s) and, ideally include figures and
tables.
4. Discussion and Critical Analysis: this section should include a more detailed discussion which contextualises the behaviour of the method(s), in terms of the theoretical properties we have identified in the
lectures and error analysis of the method(s). This is the most important section of the report.
5. Conclusion: demonstrates your identified knowledge about the problem.
6. Reference: reference of related work.
Note that we are more interested in seeing evidence that you have thought about the task and investigated the
reasons for the relative performance of different methods, rather than in the raw accuracy/scores of different
methods. This is not to say that you should ignore the relative performance of different runs over the data, but
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rather that you should think beyond simple numbers to the reasons that underlie them, and connect these to the
theory that we have discussed in this subject.
We provide LATEXand Word style files that we would prefer that you use in writing the report. Reports must be
submitted in the form of a single PDF file. If a report is submitted in any format other than PDF, we reserve
the right to return the report with a mark of 0.
To facilitate anonymous peer-review, your name and student ID should not appear anywhere in the
report, including the metadata (filename, etc.).
5.3 Stage I: Predictions of test data
To give you the possibility of evaluating your models on the test set, we will be setting up a Kaggle in-class
competition for this project. You can submit results on the test set there, and get immediate feedback on your
model’s performance. There is a Leaderboard, that will allow you to see how well you are doing as compared to
other classmates participating online. The Kaggle in-class competition URL and instructions will be announced
on Canvas shortly.
You will receive marks for submitting at least one set of predictions for the unlabelled test set into the competition; and get basically reasonable accuracy (higher than 60%). The focus of this assignment is on the quality
of your critical analysis and your report, rather than the performance of your Machine Learning models.
5.4 Stage II: Reviews
Stage II submissions will be open as soon as the reports are available (within 24 hours after the Stage I submission deadline). During the reviewing process, you will read two submissions by other students. This is to
help you contemplate some other ways of approaching the project, and to ensure that students get some extra
feedback. For each report, you should aim to write 200-400 words total (200-300 words if you work alone, or
300-400 words if you work in a group of two people), responding to three questions:
• Briefly summarise what the author has done
• Indicate what you think that the author has done well, and why
• Indicate what you think could have been improved, and why
Please be courteous and professional in the reviewing process. A brief guideline for reviewers published
by IEEE can be found https://www.ieee.org/content/dam/ieee-org/ieee/web/org/members/
students/reviewer_guidelines_final.pdf.
5.5 Stage II: Reflections
A comprehensive written reflection piece summarising your critical reflection on the following topics within
400 words.
1. the process of completing this project
2. things that you are satisfied with and those can be improved in your Stage I deliverables, e.g. modelling,
evaluation, analysis and discussion.
3. if you have worked in a group of two people, what are the individual contributions?
The reflection report is individual and not anonymous. Everyone must submit their own reflection on Canvas.
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6 Assessment Criteria
The Project will be marked out of 20, and is worth 20% of your overall mark for the subject. The mark
breakdown will be:
Stage I Report 15 marks
Performance of classifier 2 mark
Stage II Reviews 2 marks
Reflection 1 mark
TOTAL 20 marks
The report will be marked according to the rubric, which is published on the Canvas. You have to submit your
code that supports the results presented in your report. If you do not submit an executable code that supports
your findings, you will receive a mark of 0 for the “Report”.
The performance of classifier is for submitting at least one set of model predictions to the Kaggle competition
(1 mark); and getting basically reasonable accuracy (higher than 60%) (1 mark).
Since all the data exist on the World Wide Web, it is possible to “cheat” and identify some of the class labels
from the test data using non-Machine Learning methods. If there is any evidence of this, the performance of
classifier will be ignored, and you will instead receive a mark of 0 for the “Performance of classifier”.
7 Using Kaggle
The Kaggle in-class competition URL will be announced on Canvas shortly. To participate the competition:
• Each student should create a Kaggle account (unless they have one already) using your Student-ID
• You may make up to 8 submissions per day. An example submission file can be found on the Kaggle site.
• Submissions will be evaluated by Kaggle for accuracy, against just 50% of the test data, forming the
public leaderboard.
• Prior to competition close, you may select a final submission out of the ones submitted previously – by
default the submission with highest public leaderboard score is selected by Kaggle.
• After competition close, public test scores will be replaced with the private leaderboard test scores (100%
test data).
8 Assignment Policies
8.1 Terms of Use
Please note that the dataset is a sample of actual data posted to the World Wide Web. As such, it may contain
information that is in poor taste, or that could be considered offensive. We would ask you, as much as possible,
to look beyond this to the task at hand. For example, it is generally not necessary to read individual records.
The opinions expressed within the data are those of the anonymised authors, and in no way express the official
views of the University of Melbourne or any of its employees; using the data in an educative capacity does not
constitute endorsement of the content contained therein.
If you object to these terms, please contact Ling Luo (ling.luo@unimelb.edu.au) as soon as possible.
8.2 Changes/Updates to the Assignment Specifications
We will use Canvas to advertise any (hopefully small-scale) changes or clarifications in the assignment specifications. Any addenda made to the assignment specifications via Canvas will supersede information contained
in this version of the specifications.
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8.3 Late Submissions
Late submissions will bring disruption to the reviewing process. You are strongly encouraged to submit by the
date and time specified above. If circumstances do not permit this, then the marks will be adjusted as follows:
• Each day (or part of the day) that the report is submitted after the specified due date and time for Stage I,
10% will be deducted from the marks available, up until 7 days (1 week) has passed, after which regular
submissions will no longer be accepted. A late report submission will mean that your report might not
participate in the reviewing process, and so you will probably receive less feedback.
• Any late submission of the reviews will incur a 50% penalty (i.e. 1 of the 2 marks), and will not be
accepted more than 7 days (1 week) after the Stage II deadline.
• Any late submission of the reflection will incur a 50% penalty (i.e. 0.5 of the 1 mark), and will not be
accepted more than 7 days (1 week) after the Stage II deadline.
8.4 Academic Honesty
While it is acceptable to discuss the assignment with others in general terms, excessive collaboration with
students outside of your group is considered collusion. Your submissions will be examined for originality and
will invoke the University’s Academic Misconduct policy (https://academicintegrity.unimelb.edu.
au/) where either inappropriate levels of collaboration or plagiarism are deemed to have taken place.
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