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Hands-On Machine Learning with scikit-learn and Scientific Python Toolkits

You're reading from  Hands-On Machine Learning with scikit-learn and Scientific Python Toolkits

Product type Book
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838826048
Pages 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Tarek Amr Tarek Amr
Profile icon Tarek Amr
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Supervised Learning
2. Introduction to Machine Learning 3. Making Decisions with Trees 4. Making Decisions with Linear Equations 5. Preparing Your Data 6. Image Processing with Nearest Neighbors 7. Classifying Text Using Naive Bayes 8. Section 2: Advanced Supervised Learning
9. Neural Networks – Here Comes Deep Learning 10. Ensembles – When One Model Is Not Enough 11. The Y is as Important as the X 12. Imbalanced Learning – Not Even 1% Win the Lottery 13. Section 3: Unsupervised Learning and More
14. Clustering – Making Sense of Unlabeled Data 15. Anomaly Detection – Finding Outliers in Data 16. Recommender System – Getting to Know Their Taste 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using gradient boosting to predict automobile prices

If I were ever stranded on a desert island and had to pick one algorithm to take with me, I'd definitely chose the gradient boosting ensemble! It has proven to work very well on many classification and regression problems. We are going to use it with the same automobile data from the previous sections. The classifier and the regressor versions of this ensemble share the exact same hyperparameters, except for the loss functions they use. This means that everything we are going to learn here will be useful to us whenever we decide to use gradient boosting ensembles for classification.

Unlike the averaging ensembles we have seen so far, the boosting ensembles build their estimators iteratively. The knowledge learned from the initial ensemble is used to build its successors. This is the main downside of boosting ensembles, where parallelism is unfeasible. Putting parallelism aside, this iterative nature of the ensemble...

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