When building complex models, it is often difficult to explain why
    the model should be trusted. While global measures such as accuracy are
    useful, they cannot be used for explaining why a model made a specific
    prediction. 'lime' (a port of the 'lime' 'Python' package) is a method for
    explaining the outcome of black box models by fitting a local model around
    the point in question an perturbations of this point. The approach is
    described in more detail in the article by Ribeiro et al. (2016) 
    <arXiv:1602.04938>.
| Version: | 
0.5.2 | 
| Imports: | 
glmnet, stats, ggplot2, tools, stringi, Matrix, Rcpp, assertthat, methods, grDevices, gower | 
| LinkingTo: | 
Rcpp, RcppEigen | 
| Suggests: | 
xgboost, testthat, mlr, h2o, text2vec, MASS, covr, knitr, rmarkdown, sessioninfo, magick, keras, htmlwidgets, shiny, shinythemes, ranger | 
| Published: | 
2021-02-24 | 
| Author: | 
Thomas Lin Pedersen
      [cre, aut],
  Michaël Benesty [aut] | 
| Maintainer: | 
Thomas Lin Pedersen  <thomasp85 at gmail.com> | 
| BugReports: | 
https://github.com/thomasp85/lime/issues | 
| License: | 
MIT + file LICENSE | 
| URL: | 
https://lime.data-imaginist.com, https://github.com/thomasp85/lime | 
| NeedsCompilation: | 
yes | 
| Materials: | 
README NEWS  | 
| CRAN checks: | 
lime results |