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Machine Learning Algorithms

You're reading from   Machine Learning Algorithms A reference guide to popular algorithms for data science and machine learning

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785889622
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Giuseppe Bonaccorso Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Author Profile Icon Giuseppe Bonaccorso
Giuseppe Bonaccorso
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Gentle Introduction to Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Important Elements in Machine Learning 3. Feature Selection and Feature Engineering 4. Linear Regression 5. Logistic Regression 6. Naive Bayes 7. Support Vector Machines 8. Decision Trees and Ensemble Learning 9. Clustering Fundamentals 10. Hierarchical Clustering 11. Introduction to Recommendation Systems 12. Introduction to Natural Language Processing 13. Topic Modeling and Sentiment Analysis in NLP 14. A Brief Introduction to Deep Learning and TensorFlow 15. Creating a Machine Learning Architecture

Managing categorical data


In many classification problems, the target dataset is made up of categorical labels which cannot immediately be processed by any algorithm. An encoding is needed and scikit-learn offers at least two valid options. Let's consider a very small dataset made of 10 categorical samples with two features each:

import numpy as np

>>> X = np.random.uniform(0.0, 1.0, size=(10, 2))
>>> Y = np.random.choice(('Male','Female'), size=(10))
>>> X[0]
array([ 0.8236887 ,  0.11975305])
>>> Y[0]
'Male'

The first option is to use the LabelEncoder class, which adopts a dictionary-oriented approach, associating to each category label a progressive integer number, that is an index of an instance array called classes_:

from sklearn.preprocessing import LabelEncoder

>>> le = LabelEncoder()
>>> yt = le.fit_transform(Y)
>>> print(yt)
[0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1]

>>> le.classes_array(['Female', 'Male'], dtype='|S6')

The inverse...

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