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Python Machine Learning By Example

Python Machine Learning By Example

By : Yuxi (Hayden) Liu
4.9 (9)
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Python Machine Learning By Example

Python Machine Learning By Example

4.9 (9)
By: Yuxi (Hayden) Liu

Overview of this book

The fourth edition of Python Machine Learning By Example is a comprehensive guide for beginners and experienced machine learning practitioners who want to learn more advanced techniques, such as multimodal modeling. Written by experienced machine learning author and ex-Google machine learning engineer Yuxi (Hayden) Liu, this edition emphasizes best practices, providing invaluable insights for machine learning engineers, data scientists, and analysts. Explore advanced techniques, including two new chapters on natural language processing transformers with BERT and GPT, and multimodal computer vision models with PyTorch and Hugging Face. You’ll learn key modeling techniques using practical examples, such as predicting stock prices and creating an image search engine. This hands-on machine learning book navigates through complex challenges, bridging the gap between theoretical understanding and practical application. Elevate your machine learning and deep learning expertise, tackle intricate problems, and unlock the potential of advanced techniques in machine learning with this authoritative guide.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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16
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Index

Implementing Naïve Bayes

After calculating the movie preference example by hand, as promised, we are going to implement Naïve Bayes from scratch. After that, we will implement it using the scikit-learn package.

Implementing Naïve Bayes from scratch

Before we develop the model, let’s define the toy dataset we just worked with:

>>> import numpy as np
>>> X_train = np.array([
...     [0, 1, 1],
...     [0, 0, 1],
...     [0, 0, 0],
...     [1, 1, 0]])
>>> Y_train = ['Y', 'N', 'Y', 'Y']
>>> X_test = np.array([[1, 1, 0]])

For the model, starting with the prior, we first group the data by label and record their indices by classes:

>>> def get_label_indices(labels):
...     """
...     Group samples based on their labels and return indices
...     @param labels: list of labels
...     @return: dict, {class1: [indices], class2: [indices]}
...     ...
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