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Building Machine Learning Systems with Python

You're reading from   Building Machine Learning Systems with Python Expand your Python knowledge and learn all about machine-learning libraries in this user-friendly manual. ML is the next big breakthrough in technology and this book will give you the head-start you need.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782161400
Length 290 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Building Machine Learning Systems with Python
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with Python Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning How to Classify with Real-world Examples 3. Clustering – Finding Related Posts 4. Topic Modeling 5. Classification – Detecting Poor Answers 6. Classification II – Sentiment Analysis 7. Regression – Recommendations 8. Regression – Recommendations Improved 9. Classification III – Music Genre Classification 10. Computer Vision – Pattern Recognition 11. Dimensionality Reduction 12. Big(ger) Data Where to Learn More about Machine Learning Index

Using FFT to build our first classifier


Nevertheless, we can now create some kind of musical fingerprint of a song using FFT. If we do this for a couple of songs, and manually assign their corresponding genres as labels, we have the training data that we can feed into our first classifier.

Increasing experimentation agility

Before we dive into the classifier training, let us first spend some time on experimentation agility. Although we have the word "fast" in FFT, it is much slower than the creation of the features in our text-based chapters, and because we are still in the experimentation phase, we might want to think about how we could speed up the whole feature-creation process.

Of course, the creation of the FFT for each file will be the same each time we run the classifier. We could therefore cache it and read the cached FFT representation instead of the wave file. We do this with the create_fft() function, which in turn uses scipy.fft() to create the FFT. For the sake of simplicity ...

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