Book Image

Python Machine Learning By Example - Third Edition

By : Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
Book Image

Python Machine Learning By Example - Third Edition

By: Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

Overview of this book

Python Machine Learning By Example, Third Edition serves as a comprehensive gateway into the world of machine learning (ML). With six new chapters, on topics including movie recommendation engine development with Naïve Bayes, recognizing faces with support vector machine, predicting stock prices with artificial neural networks, categorizing images of clothing with convolutional neural networks, predicting with sequences using recurring neural networks, and leveraging reinforcement learning for making decisions, the book has been considerably updated for the latest enterprise requirements. At the same time, this book provides actionable insights on the key fundamentals of ML with Python programming. Hayden applies his expertise to demonstrate implementations of algorithms in Python, both from scratch and with libraries. Each chapter walks through an industry-adopted application. With the help of realistic examples, you will gain an understanding of the mechanics of ML techniques in areas such as exploratory data analysis, feature engineering, classification, regression, clustering, and NLP. By the end of this ML Python book, you will have gained a broad picture of the ML ecosystem and will be well-versed in the best practices of applying ML techniques to solve problems.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
15
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16
Index

Summary

The project in this chapter was about finding hidden similarity underneath newsgroups data, be it semantic groups, themes, or word clouds. We started with what unsupervised learning does and the typical types of unsupervised learning algorithms. We then introduced unsupervised learning clustering and studied a popular clustering algorithm, k-means, in detail.

We also talked about tf-idf as a more efficient feature extraction tool for text data. After that, we performed k-means clustering on the newsgroups data and obtained four meaningful clusters. After examining the key terms in each resulting cluster, we went straight to extracting representative terms among original documents using topic modeling techniques. Two powerful topic modeling approaches, NMF and LDA, were discussed and implemented. Finally, we had some fun interpreting the topics we obtained from both methods.

Hitherto, we have covered all the main categories of unsupervised learning, including dimensionality...