2

I am trying to choose a title. I have a big data set and I will get subsets of this data set using statistical techniques (random sampling etc.).

Which one of the following is correct? If more than one is suitable, is there a nuance between them?

  • create subset data sets
  • construct subset data sets
  • get new subset data set

I am not a native speaker; therefore if all of them are wrong, I am open to suggestions.

4
  • 1
    A subset is still a set, and if it was created from a data set, it's still a data set. So I wouldn't bother with the word(s) "dataset" at all. I think "create" is better than "construct", and "get new subset" sounds like an inline comment to program code, not really suitable for general-purpose writing. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:32
  • I thought I'd seen a verb form of the word "subset", as in "we subset the data", but I can't find a reference to it, so I'm not posting it as an answer. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 18:24
  • 1
    You are getting good answers here, but if this is writing intended for an audience of statisticians it may also be wise to consult stats.stackexchange.com, since they will be well-versed in the most common usage patterns for their field. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 19:30
  • Subset is perfectly valid as a verb, in a technical context.
    – Hot Licks
    Commented Jun 5, 2016 at 4:10

8 Answers 8

5

I would write for example

Using random sampling, we obtain these data subsets.

The verbs create, construct and get are alright but sound awkward.

Create suggests that something is produced from scratch, construct suggests that an elaborate procedure exists to produce something, and obtain suggests that something is produced from something else.

1
  • Actually : there exists data pre-processing steps. But I do not consider them to be too elaborate. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:41
3

Maybe 'extract' captures the fact that you're processing the original data to obtain the subsets e.g. "Using random sampling, we extracted the following subsets...".

2
  • Are you using extract as "To take by selection" Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:44
  • Yep, pretty much, although it could be thought of as more informal as in "extracting the juice from an orange"
    – tinyd
    Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:47
3

I would use extract, meaning "to draw forth".

Also, saying "subset data sets" is redundant. The word "subsets" already includes "sets", and basically means "a smaller set from a larger set." So, I would describe what you are extracting as data subsets, as in the following examples:

Given the original data, we extracted various subsets based on the following criteria...

We extracted these data subsets from the original study...

We used random sampling to extract a subset of data...

2

All of them are correct, except that get a new... seems more natural than get new.... Also note that assemblies derived via random sampling are often referred to as drawn rather than created (e.g.: "Eight sets/subsets/datasets/samples were drawn from the population") to underpin the notion they are random rather than deterministically constructed.

3
  • Since drawn is not a verb, can I use "draw subsets from data". Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:36
  • 3
    Yes; for example, "We drew eight subsets from the population", "We randomly selected eight subsets from the population", "We randomly constructed eight subsets from a thousand random members of the population", "We draw random subsets in the following way: ...", etc. Exact wording must vary to accord with circumstances. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 17:43
  • 1
    Point of clarification: "were drawn" is a verb. But jwpat is correct. Commented Dec 20, 2011 at 19:26
2

Are you sure you mean title? Because it seems you talk about an abstract. A title would sound like "Creation of a subset...".
Indeed, extract is commonly used in sampling, and you can also simply say we sample a subset or we take/draw a sample
Get is informal and is not preferable in formal literature.
Construct has a nuance of elaboration, often as a result of an algorithm or procedure in which all steps are given.
Obtain is very common and has a formal touch.

1

By far the most common term I have come across that is used to convey this meaning is 'extract'. I would suggest it on the strength of its familiarity, precedence and also for being very unambiguous.

There could be a better term, though, I am not sure.

1

You could use the phrase "collect a subset from the dataset."

Another prviously mentioned answer "extract subsets" would be appropriate.

If you're looking for a title: "Extracting Subsets: Various Statistical Techniques" would probably be appropriate for your assignment.

A subset is a portion of a set, and if you're collecting it from a dataset, then the term data set subset is incredibly redundant.

1

When speaking precisely 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 might say you will be "selecting and/or extracting (proper) subsets from the entire dataset."

But omitting "proper" is perfectly fine, it's just if you need to specifically emphasize the non-entirety of it for some reason.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .