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Part 18: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Putting Graph Embeddings into an ML Model
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Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists
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- 1 Part 1: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Connect from Jupyter to a Neo4j Sandbox
- 2 Part 2: Bited-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Using the py2neo Python Driver
- 3 Part 3: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Using the Neo4j Python Driver
- 4 Part 4: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Basic Cypher Queries (and with Google Colab)
- 5 Part 5: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Populating the Database from Pandas
- 6 Part 6: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Populating the Database with LOAD CSV
- 7 Part 7: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Populating the Database with the neo4j-admin tool
- 8 Part 8: Populating the Database from a JSON file
- 9 Part 9: Cypher Queries 2
- 10 Part 10: Creating in-memory graphs with Cypher projections
- 11 Part 11: Import RDF data from Wikidata
- 12 Part 12: Creating In-Memory Graphs with Native Projections
- 13 Part 13: Calculating Centrality
- 14 Part 14: Community Detection with the Louvain Method
- 15 Part 15: Community detection via Weakly Connected Components
- 16 Part 16: Using Strongly Connected Components to find Communities
- 17 Part 17: Creating FastRP Graph Embeddings
- 18 Graph Data Visualization for Data Scientists and Data Analysts | Neo4j Bloom
- 19 Part 18: Bite-Sized Neo4j for Data Scientists - Putting Graph Embeddings into an ML Model
- 20 Part 19: Starting with a SQL table...
- 21 Part 20: ...And compare it to a graph... (2/n)
- 22 Part 21: An example of when querying a graph can be easier than SQL (3/n)
- 23 Part 22: A side-by-side calculation of degree using SQL and Neo4j (4/n)