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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

P greater than N scenarios


The title of this section is a bit of inside jargon, which you will now learn. Starting in the 1990s, first in the biomedical domain and then on the Web, problems started to appear when P was greater than N. What this means is that the number of features, P, was greater than the number of examples, N (these letters were the conventional statistical shorthand for these concepts). These became known as "P greater than N" problems.

For example, if your input is a set of written text, a simple way to approach it is to consider each possible word in the dictionary as a feature and regress on those (we will later work on one such problem ourselves). In the English language, you have over 20,000 words (this is if you perform some stemming and only consider common words; it is more than ten times that if you keep trademarks). If you only have a few hundred or a few thousand examples, you will have more features than examples.

In this case, as the number of features is greater...

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