Feature Labs, a startup with roots in research begun at MIT, officially launched today with a set of tools to help data scientists build machine learning algorithms more quickly.
Co-founder and CEO Max Kanter says the company has developed a way to automate “feature engineering,” which is often a time consuming and manual process for data scientists. “Feature Labs helps companies identify, implement, and most importantly deploy impactful machine learning products,” Kanter told TechCrunch.
He added, “Feature Labs is unique because we automate feature engineering, which is the process of using domain knowledge to extract new variables from raw data that make machine learning algorithms work.”
The company achieves this by using a process called “Deep Feature Synthesis,” which create features from raw relational and transactional datasets such as visits to the website or abandoned shopping cart items and automatically converts that into a predictive signal, Kanter explained.
He says this is vastly different from current human-driven process, which is time-consuming and error prone. Automated feature engineering enables data scientists to create the same kinds of variables they would come up with on their own, but much faster without having to spend so much time on the underlying plumbing. “By giving data scientists this automated process, they can spend more time figuring out what they need to predict,” he said.
It achieved that in a couple of ways. First of all, it has developed an open source framework called Featuretools, which provide a way for developers to get started with the Feature Labs toolset. Kanter says that they can use these tools to build small projects and get comfortable using the algorithms. “The goal of this initiative is to share our vision by giving developers the chance to experiment with automated feature engineering on new machine learning problems,” he wrote in a blog postannouncing the company launch.
Once a company wants to move beyond experimentation to scale a project, however, they would need to buy the company’s commercial product, which they are offering as a cloud service or on-prem solution, depending on the customers requirements. Early customers include BBVA Bank, Kohl’s, NASA and DARPA.
The company also announced a seed funding round of $1.5 million, which actually closed last March. The round was led by Flybridge Capital Partners with participation from First Star Ventures and 122 West Ventures.
Read the source article at TechCrunch.