Book Image

scikit-learn Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Trent Hauck
Book Image

scikit-learn Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Trent Hauck

Overview of this book

Python is quickly becoming the go-to language for analysts and data scientists due to its simplicity and flexibility, and within the Python data space, scikit-learn is the unequivocal choice for machine learning. This book includes walk throughs and solutions to the common as well as the not-so-common problems in machine learning, and how scikit-learn can be leveraged to perform various machine learning tasks effectively. The second edition begins with taking you through recipes on evaluating the statistical properties of data and generates synthetic data for machine learning modelling. As you progress through the chapters, you will comes across recipes that will teach you to implement techniques like data pre-processing, linear regression, logistic regression, K-NN, Naïve Bayes, classification, decision trees, Ensembles and much more. Furthermore, you’ll learn to optimize your models with multi-class classification, cross validation, model evaluation and dive deeper in to implementing deep learning with scikit-learn. Along with covering the enhanced features on model section, API and new features like classifiers, regressors and estimators the book also contains recipes on evaluating and fine-tuning the performance of your model. By the end of this book, you will have explored plethora of features offered by scikit-learn for Python to solve any machine learning problem you come across.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Feature selection on L1 norms

We're going to work with some ideas that are similar to those we saw in the recipe on LASSO regression. In that recipe, we looked at the number of features that had zero coefficients. Now we're going to take this a step further and use the sparseness associated with L1 norms to pre-process the features.

Getting ready

We'll use the diabetes dataset to fit a regression. First, we'll fit a basic linear regression model with a ShuffleSplit cross-validation. After we do that, we'll use LASSO regression to find the coefficients that are zero when using an L1 penalty. This hopefully will help us to avoid overfitting (when the model is too specific to the data it was trained on...