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Machine Learning Algorithms

Machine Learning Algorithms

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Machine Learning Algorithms

Machine Learning Algorithms

Overview of this book

Machine learning has gained tremendous popularity for its powerful and fast predictions with large datasets. However, the true forces behind its powerful output are the complex algorithms involving substantial statistical analysis that churn large datasets and generate substantial insight. This second edition of Machine Learning Algorithms walks you through prominent development outcomes that have taken place relating to machine learning algorithms, which constitute major contributions to the machine learning process and help you to strengthen and master statistical interpretation across the areas of supervised, semi-supervised, and reinforcement learning. Once the core concepts of an algorithm have been covered, you’ll explore real-world examples based on the most diffused libraries, such as scikit-learn, NLTK, TensorFlow, and Keras. You will discover new topics such as principal component analysis (PCA), independent component analysis (ICA), Bayesian regression, discriminant analysis, advanced clustering, and gaussian mixture. By the end of this book, you will have studied machine learning algorithms and be able to put them into production to make your machine learning applications more innovative.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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Linear regression with scikit-learn and higher dimensionality

The scikit-learn library offers the LinearRegression class, which works with n-dimensional spaces. For this purpose, we're going to use the Boston dataset:

from sklearn.datasets import load_boston

boston = load_boston()

print(boston.data.shape)
(506L, 13L)

print(boston.target.shape)
(506L,)

It has 506 samples with 13 input features and one output. In the following graph, there's a collection of the plots of the first 12 features:

The plot of the first 12 features of the Boston dataset
When working with datasets, it's useful to have a tabular view to manipulate data. Pandas is a perfect framework for this task, and even though it's beyond the scope of this book, I suggest you create a data frame with the pandas.DataFrame(boston.data, columns=boston.feature_names) command and use Jupyter to visualize it...
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