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Interpretable Machine Learning with Python

You're reading from   Interpretable Machine Learning with Python Build explainable, fair, and robust high-performance models with hands-on, real-world examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235424
Length 606 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Serg Masís Serg Masís
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Serg Masís
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Interpretation, Interpretability, and Explainability; and Why Does It All Matter? 2. Key Concepts of Interpretability FREE CHAPTER 3. Interpretation Challenges 4. Global Model-Agnostic Interpretation Methods 5. Local Model-Agnostic Interpretation Methods 6. Anchors and Counterfactual Explanations 7. Visualizing Convolutional Neural Networks 8. Interpreting NLP Transformers 9. Interpretation Methods for Multivariate Forecasting and Sensitivity Analysis 10. Feature Selection and Engineering for Interpretability 11. Bias Mitigation and Causal Inference Methods 12. Monotonic Constraints and Model Tuning for Interpretability 13. Adversarial Robustness 14. What’s Next for Machine Learning Interpretability? 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Studying intrinsically interpretable (white-box) models

So far, in this chapter, we have already fitted our training data to model classes representing each of these “white-box” model families. The purpose of this section is to show you exactly why they are intrinsically interpretable. We’ll do so by employing the models that were previously fitted.

Generalized Linear Models (GLMs)

GLMs are a large family of model classes that have a model for every statistical distribution. Just like linear regression assumes your target feature and residuals have a normal distribution, logistic regression assumes the Bernoulli distribution. There are GLMs for every distribution, such as Poisson regression for Poisson distribution and multinomial response for multinomial distribution. You choose which GLM to use based on the distribution of your target variable and whether your data meets the other assumptions of the GLM (they vary). In addition to an underlying distribution...

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