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Python Machine Learning

You're reading from  Python Machine Learning

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783555130
Pages 454 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Sebastian Raschka Sebastian Raschka
Profile icon Sebastian Raschka

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Python Machine Learning
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Giving Computers the Ability to Learn from Data 2. Training Machine Learning Algorithms for Classification 3. A Tour of Machine Learning Classifiers Using Scikit-learn 4. Building Good Training Sets – Data Preprocessing 5. Compressing Data via Dimensionality Reduction 6. Learning Best Practices for Model Evaluation and Hyperparameter Tuning 7. Combining Different Models for Ensemble Learning 8. Applying Machine Learning to Sentiment Analysis 9. Embedding a Machine Learning Model into a Web Application 10. Predicting Continuous Target Variables with Regression Analysis 11. Working with Unlabeled Data – Clustering Analysis 12. Training Artificial Neural Networks for Image Recognition 13. Parallelizing Neural Network Training with Theano Index

Introducing the bag-of-words model


We remember from Chapter 4, Building Good Training Sets – Data Preprocessing, that we have to convert categorical data, such as text or words, into a numerical form before we can pass it on to a machine learning algorithm. In this section, we will introduce the bag-of-words model that allows us to represent text as numerical feature vectors. The idea behind the bag-of-words model is quite simple and can be summarized as follows:

  1. We create a vocabulary of unique tokens—for example, words—from the entire set of documents.

  2. We construct a feature vector from each document that contains the counts of how often each word occurs in the particular document.

Since the unique words in each document represent only a small subset of all the words in the bag-of-words vocabulary, the feature vectors will consist of mostly zeros, which is why we call them sparse. Do not worry if this sounds too abstract; in the following subsections, we will walk through the process of creating...

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