‖ Gradient descent gives one way of deterring J. Let’s discuss a second way of doing so, this time performing the minimization explicitly and without resorting to an iterative algorithm. In the “Normal Equation” method, we will take care of the Equation by taking its derivatives with respect to the θ J, and setting them to zero. This allows us to find the optimum theta without iteration. The normal equation formula is given below:
There is no need to do feature scaling with the normal equation.
The following is a comparison of gradient descent and the normal equation:
With the normal equation, computing the inversion has complexity O(n^3). So if we have a very large number of features, the normal equation will be slow. In practice, when n exceeds 10,000 it might be a good time to go from a normal solution to an iterative process.
Normal Equation Noninvertibility
When implementing the normal equation in octave we want to use the ‘pinv’ function rather than ‘inv.’ The ‘pinv’ function will give you a value of θ even if X^TX is not invertible.
If X^TX is noninvertible, the common causes might be having :
. Redundant features, Where two features are very closely related (i.e. they are children dependent). Too many features (e.g. m ≤ n) case, delete some features or use “regularization” Solutions to the above problems include deleting a feature that is linearly dependent with another or deleting one or more features when there are too many features.