1075 lines
44 KiB
ReStructuredText
1075 lines
44 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _feature_extraction:
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==================
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Feature extraction
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==================
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.. currentmodule:: sklearn.feature_extraction
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The :mod:`sklearn.feature_extraction` module can be used to extract
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features in a format supported by machine learning algorithms from datasets
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consisting of formats such as text and image.
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.. note::
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Feature extraction is very different from :ref:`feature_selection`:
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the former consists in transforming arbitrary data, such as text or
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images, into numerical features usable for machine learning. The latter
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is a machine learning technique applied on these features.
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.. _dict_feature_extraction:
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Loading features from dicts
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===========================
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The class :class:`DictVectorizer` can be used to convert feature
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arrays represented as lists of standard Python ``dict`` objects to the
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NumPy/SciPy representation used by scikit-learn estimators.
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While not particularly fast to process, Python's ``dict`` has the
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advantages of being convenient to use, being sparse (absent features
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need not be stored) and storing feature names in addition to values.
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:class:`DictVectorizer` implements what is called one-of-K or "one-hot"
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coding for categorical (aka nominal, discrete) features. Categorical
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features are "attribute-value" pairs where the value is restricted
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to a list of discrete possibilities without ordering (e.g. topic
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identifiers, types of objects, tags, names...).
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In the following, "city" is a categorical attribute while "temperature"
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is a traditional numerical feature::
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>>> measurements = [
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... {'city': 'Dubai', 'temperature': 33.},
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... {'city': 'London', 'temperature': 12.},
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... {'city': 'San Francisco', 'temperature': 18.},
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... ]
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>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction import DictVectorizer
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>>> vec = DictVectorizer()
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>>> vec.fit_transform(measurements).toarray()
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array([[ 1., 0., 0., 33.],
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[ 0., 1., 0., 12.],
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[ 0., 0., 1., 18.]])
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>>> vec.get_feature_names_out()
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array(['city=Dubai', 'city=London', 'city=San Francisco', 'temperature'], ...)
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:class:`DictVectorizer` accepts multiple string values for one
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feature, like, e.g., multiple categories for a movie.
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Assume a database classifies each movie using some categories (not mandatories)
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and its year of release.
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>>> movie_entry = [{'category': ['thriller', 'drama'], 'year': 2003},
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... {'category': ['animation', 'family'], 'year': 2011},
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... {'year': 1974}]
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>>> vec.fit_transform(movie_entry).toarray()
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array([[0.000e+00, 1.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 1.000e+00, 2.003e+03],
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[1.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 1.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 2.011e+03],
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[0.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 0.000e+00, 1.974e+03]])
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>>> vec.get_feature_names_out()
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array(['category=animation', 'category=drama', 'category=family',
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'category=thriller', 'year'], ...)
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>>> vec.transform({'category': ['thriller'],
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... 'unseen_feature': '3'}).toarray()
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array([[0., 0., 0., 1., 0.]])
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:class:`DictVectorizer` is also a useful representation transformation
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for training sequence classifiers in Natural Language Processing models
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that typically work by extracting feature windows around a particular
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word of interest.
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For example, suppose that we have a first algorithm that extracts Part of
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Speech (PoS) tags that we want to use as complementary tags for training
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a sequence classifier (e.g. a chunker). The following dict could be
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such a window of features extracted around the word 'sat' in the sentence
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'The cat sat on the mat.'::
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>>> pos_window = [
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... {
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... 'word-2': 'the',
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... 'pos-2': 'DT',
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... 'word-1': 'cat',
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... 'pos-1': 'NN',
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... 'word+1': 'on',
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... 'pos+1': 'PP',
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... },
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... # in a real application one would extract many such dictionaries
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... ]
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This description can be vectorized into a sparse two-dimensional matrix
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suitable for feeding into a classifier (maybe after being piped into a
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:class:`~text.TfidfTransformer` for normalization)::
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>>> vec = DictVectorizer()
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>>> pos_vectorized = vec.fit_transform(pos_window)
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>>> pos_vectorized
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<1x6 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.float64'>'
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with 6 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
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>>> pos_vectorized.toarray()
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array([[1., 1., 1., 1., 1., 1.]])
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>>> vec.get_feature_names_out()
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array(['pos+1=PP', 'pos-1=NN', 'pos-2=DT', 'word+1=on', 'word-1=cat',
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'word-2=the'], ...)
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As you can imagine, if one extracts such a context around each individual
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word of a corpus of documents the resulting matrix will be very wide
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(many one-hot-features) with most of them being valued to zero most
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of the time. So as to make the resulting data structure able to fit in
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memory the ``DictVectorizer`` class uses a ``scipy.sparse`` matrix by
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default instead of a ``numpy.ndarray``.
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.. _feature_hashing:
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Feature hashing
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===============
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.. currentmodule:: sklearn.feature_extraction
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The class :class:`FeatureHasher` is a high-speed, low-memory vectorizer that
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uses a technique known as
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`feature hashing <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feature_hashing>`_,
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or the "hashing trick".
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Instead of building a hash table of the features encountered in training,
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as the vectorizers do, instances of :class:`FeatureHasher`
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apply a hash function to the features
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to determine their column index in sample matrices directly.
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The result is increased speed and reduced memory usage,
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at the expense of inspectability;
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the hasher does not remember what the input features looked like
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and has no ``inverse_transform`` method.
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Since the hash function might cause collisions between (unrelated) features,
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a signed hash function is used and the sign of the hash value
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determines the sign of the value stored in the output matrix for a feature.
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This way, collisions are likely to cancel out rather than accumulate error,
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and the expected mean of any output feature's value is zero. This mechanism
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is enabled by default with ``alternate_sign=True`` and is particularly useful
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for small hash table sizes (``n_features < 10000``). For large hash table
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sizes, it can be disabled, to allow the output to be passed to estimators like
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:class:`~sklearn.naive_bayes.MultinomialNB` or
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:class:`~sklearn.feature_selection.chi2`
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feature selectors that expect non-negative inputs.
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:class:`FeatureHasher` accepts either mappings
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(like Python's ``dict`` and its variants in the ``collections`` module),
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``(feature, value)`` pairs, or strings,
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depending on the constructor parameter ``input_type``.
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Mapping are treated as lists of ``(feature, value)`` pairs,
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while single strings have an implicit value of 1,
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so ``['feat1', 'feat2', 'feat3']`` is interpreted as
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``[('feat1', 1), ('feat2', 1), ('feat3', 1)]``.
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If a single feature occurs multiple times in a sample,
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the associated values will be summed
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(so ``('feat', 2)`` and ``('feat', 3.5)`` become ``('feat', 5.5)``).
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The output from :class:`FeatureHasher` is always a ``scipy.sparse`` matrix
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in the CSR format.
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Feature hashing can be employed in document classification,
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but unlike :class:`~text.CountVectorizer`,
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:class:`FeatureHasher` does not do word
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splitting or any other preprocessing except Unicode-to-UTF-8 encoding;
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see :ref:`hashing_vectorizer`, below, for a combined tokenizer/hasher.
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As an example, consider a word-level natural language processing task
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that needs features extracted from ``(token, part_of_speech)`` pairs.
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One could use a Python generator function to extract features::
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def token_features(token, part_of_speech):
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if token.isdigit():
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yield "numeric"
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else:
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yield "token={}".format(token.lower())
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yield "token,pos={},{}".format(token, part_of_speech)
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if token[0].isupper():
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yield "uppercase_initial"
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if token.isupper():
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yield "all_uppercase"
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yield "pos={}".format(part_of_speech)
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Then, the ``raw_X`` to be fed to ``FeatureHasher.transform``
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can be constructed using::
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raw_X = (token_features(tok, pos_tagger(tok)) for tok in corpus)
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and fed to a hasher with::
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hasher = FeatureHasher(input_type='string')
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X = hasher.transform(raw_X)
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to get a ``scipy.sparse`` matrix ``X``.
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Note the use of a generator comprehension,
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which introduces laziness into the feature extraction:
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tokens are only processed on demand from the hasher.
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.. dropdown:: Implementation details
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:class:`FeatureHasher` uses the signed 32-bit variant of MurmurHash3.
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As a result (and because of limitations in ``scipy.sparse``),
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the maximum number of features supported is currently :math:`2^{31} - 1`.
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The original formulation of the hashing trick by Weinberger et al.
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used two separate hash functions :math:`h` and :math:`\xi`
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to determine the column index and sign of a feature, respectively.
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The present implementation works under the assumption
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that the sign bit of MurmurHash3 is independent of its other bits.
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Since a simple modulo is used to transform the hash function to a column index,
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it is advisable to use a power of two as the ``n_features`` parameter;
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otherwise the features will not be mapped evenly to the columns.
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.. rubric:: References
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* `MurmurHash3 <https://github.com/aappleby/smhasher>`_.
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.. rubric:: References
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* Kilian Weinberger, Anirban Dasgupta, John Langford, Alex Smola and
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Josh Attenberg (2009). `Feature hashing for large scale multitask learning
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<https://alex.smola.org/papers/2009/Weinbergeretal09.pdf>`_. Proc. ICML.
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.. _text_feature_extraction:
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Text feature extraction
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=======================
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.. currentmodule:: sklearn.feature_extraction.text
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The Bag of Words representation
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-------------------------------
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Text Analysis is a major application field for machine learning
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algorithms. However the raw data, a sequence of symbols cannot be fed
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directly to the algorithms themselves as most of them expect numerical
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feature vectors with a fixed size rather than the raw text documents
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with variable length.
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In order to address this, scikit-learn provides utilities for the most
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common ways to extract numerical features from text content, namely:
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- **tokenizing** strings and giving an integer id for each possible token,
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for instance by using white-spaces and punctuation as token separators.
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- **counting** the occurrences of tokens in each document.
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- **normalizing** and weighting with diminishing importance tokens that
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occur in the majority of samples / documents.
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In this scheme, features and samples are defined as follows:
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- each **individual token occurrence frequency** (normalized or not)
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is treated as a **feature**.
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- the vector of all the token frequencies for a given **document** is
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considered a multivariate **sample**.
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A corpus of documents can thus be represented by a matrix with one row
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per document and one column per token (e.g. word) occurring in the corpus.
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We call **vectorization** the general process of turning a collection
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of text documents into numerical feature vectors. This specific strategy
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(tokenization, counting and normalization) is called the **Bag of Words**
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or "Bag of n-grams" representation. Documents are described by word
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occurrences while completely ignoring the relative position information
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of the words in the document.
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Sparsity
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--------
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As most documents will typically use a very small subset of the words used in
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the corpus, the resulting matrix will have many feature values that are
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zeros (typically more than 99% of them).
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For instance a collection of 10,000 short text documents (such as emails)
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will use a vocabulary with a size in the order of 100,000 unique words in
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total while each document will use 100 to 1000 unique words individually.
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In order to be able to store such a matrix in memory but also to speed
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up algebraic operations matrix / vector, implementations will typically
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use a sparse representation such as the implementations available in the
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``scipy.sparse`` package.
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Common Vectorizer usage
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-----------------------
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:class:`CountVectorizer` implements both tokenization and occurrence
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counting in a single class::
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>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction.text import CountVectorizer
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This model has many parameters, however the default values are quite
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reasonable (please see the :ref:`reference documentation
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<feature_extraction_ref-from-text>` for the details)::
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>>> vectorizer = CountVectorizer()
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>>> vectorizer
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CountVectorizer()
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Let's use it to tokenize and count the word occurrences of a minimalistic
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corpus of text documents::
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>>> corpus = [
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... 'This is the first document.',
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... 'This is the second second document.',
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... 'And the third one.',
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... 'Is this the first document?',
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... ]
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>>> X = vectorizer.fit_transform(corpus)
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>>> X
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<4x9 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.int64'>'
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with 19 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
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The default configuration tokenizes the string by extracting words of
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at least 2 letters. The specific function that does this step can be
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requested explicitly::
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>>> analyze = vectorizer.build_analyzer()
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>>> analyze("This is a text document to analyze.") == (
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... ['this', 'is', 'text', 'document', 'to', 'analyze'])
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True
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Each term found by the analyzer during the fit is assigned a unique
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integer index corresponding to a column in the resulting matrix. This
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interpretation of the columns can be retrieved as follows::
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>>> vectorizer.get_feature_names_out()
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array(['and', 'document', 'first', 'is', 'one', 'second', 'the',
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'third', 'this'], ...)
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>>> X.toarray()
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array([[0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1],
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[0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 2, 1, 0, 1],
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[1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0],
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[0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1]]...)
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The converse mapping from feature name to column index is stored in the
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``vocabulary_`` attribute of the vectorizer::
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>>> vectorizer.vocabulary_.get('document')
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1
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Hence words that were not seen in the training corpus will be completely
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ignored in future calls to the transform method::
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>>> vectorizer.transform(['Something completely new.']).toarray()
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array([[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]]...)
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Note that in the previous corpus, the first and the last documents have
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exactly the same words hence are encoded in equal vectors. In particular
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we lose the information that the last document is an interrogative form. To
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preserve some of the local ordering information we can extract 2-grams
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of words in addition to the 1-grams (individual words)::
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>>> bigram_vectorizer = CountVectorizer(ngram_range=(1, 2),
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... token_pattern=r'\b\w+\b', min_df=1)
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>>> analyze = bigram_vectorizer.build_analyzer()
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>>> analyze('Bi-grams are cool!') == (
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... ['bi', 'grams', 'are', 'cool', 'bi grams', 'grams are', 'are cool'])
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True
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The vocabulary extracted by this vectorizer is hence much bigger and
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can now resolve ambiguities encoded in local positioning patterns::
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>>> X_2 = bigram_vectorizer.fit_transform(corpus).toarray()
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>>> X_2
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array([[0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0],
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[0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 2, 1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0],
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[1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0],
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[0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1]]...)
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In particular the interrogative form "Is this" is only present in the
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last document::
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>>> feature_index = bigram_vectorizer.vocabulary_.get('is this')
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>>> X_2[:, feature_index]
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array([0, 0, 0, 1]...)
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.. _stop_words:
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Using stop words
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----------------
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Stop words are words like "and", "the", "him", which are presumed to be
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uninformative in representing the content of a text, and which may be
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removed to avoid them being construed as signal for prediction. Sometimes,
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however, similar words are useful for prediction, such as in classifying
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writing style or personality.
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There are several known issues in our provided 'english' stop word list. It
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does not aim to be a general, 'one-size-fits-all' solution as some tasks
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may require a more custom solution. See [NQY18]_ for more details.
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Please take care in choosing a stop word list.
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Popular stop word lists may include words that are highly informative to
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some tasks, such as *computer*.
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You should also make sure that the stop word list has had the same
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preprocessing and tokenization applied as the one used in the vectorizer.
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The word *we've* is split into *we* and *ve* by CountVectorizer's default
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tokenizer, so if *we've* is in ``stop_words``, but *ve* is not, *ve* will
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be retained from *we've* in transformed text. Our vectorizers will try to
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identify and warn about some kinds of inconsistencies.
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.. rubric:: References
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.. [NQY18] J. Nothman, H. Qin and R. Yurchak (2018).
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`"Stop Word Lists in Free Open-source Software Packages"
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<https://aclweb.org/anthology/W18-2502>`__.
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In *Proc. Workshop for NLP Open Source Software*.
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.. _tfidf:
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Tf–idf term weighting
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---------------------
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In a large text corpus, some words will be very present (e.g. "the", "a",
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"is" in English) hence carrying very little meaningful information about
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the actual contents of the document. If we were to feed the direct count
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data directly to a classifier those very frequent terms would shadow
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the frequencies of rarer yet more interesting terms.
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In order to re-weight the count features into floating point values
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suitable for usage by a classifier it is very common to use the tf–idf
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transform.
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Tf means **term-frequency** while tf–idf means term-frequency times
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**inverse document-frequency**:
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:math:`\text{tf-idf(t,d)}=\text{tf(t,d)} \times \text{idf(t)}`.
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Using the ``TfidfTransformer``'s default settings,
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``TfidfTransformer(norm='l2', use_idf=True, smooth_idf=True, sublinear_tf=False)``
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the term frequency, the number of times a term occurs in a given document,
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is multiplied with idf component, which is computed as
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:math:`\text{idf}(t) = \log{\frac{1 + n}{1+\text{df}(t)}} + 1`,
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where :math:`n` is the total number of documents in the document set, and
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:math:`\text{df}(t)` is the number of documents in the document set that
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contain term :math:`t`. The resulting tf-idf vectors are then normalized by the
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Euclidean norm:
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:math:`v_{norm} = \frac{v}{||v||_2} = \frac{v}{\sqrt{v{_1}^2 +
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v{_2}^2 + \dots + v{_n}^2}}`.
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This was originally a term weighting scheme developed for information retrieval
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(as a ranking function for search engines results) that has also found good
|
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use in document classification and clustering.
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The following sections contain further explanations and examples that
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illustrate how the tf-idfs are computed exactly and how the tf-idfs
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computed in scikit-learn's :class:`TfidfTransformer`
|
||
and :class:`TfidfVectorizer` differ slightly from the standard textbook
|
||
notation that defines the idf as
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{idf}(t) = \log{\frac{n}{1+\text{df}(t)}}.`
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the :class:`TfidfTransformer` and :class:`TfidfVectorizer`
|
||
with ``smooth_idf=False``, the
|
||
"1" count is added to the idf instead of the idf's denominator:
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{idf}(t) = \log{\frac{n}{\text{df}(t)}} + 1`
|
||
|
||
This normalization is implemented by the :class:`TfidfTransformer`
|
||
class::
|
||
|
||
>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction.text import TfidfTransformer
|
||
>>> transformer = TfidfTransformer(smooth_idf=False)
|
||
>>> transformer
|
||
TfidfTransformer(smooth_idf=False)
|
||
|
||
Again please see the :ref:`reference documentation
|
||
<feature_extraction_ref-from-text>` for the details on all the parameters.
|
||
|
||
.. dropdown:: Numeric example of a tf-idf matrix
|
||
|
||
Let's take an example with the following counts. The first term is present
|
||
100% of the time hence not very interesting. The two other features only
|
||
in less than 50% of the time hence probably more representative of the
|
||
content of the documents::
|
||
|
||
>>> counts = [[3, 0, 1],
|
||
... [2, 0, 0],
|
||
... [3, 0, 0],
|
||
... [4, 0, 0],
|
||
... [3, 2, 0],
|
||
... [3, 0, 2]]
|
||
...
|
||
>>> tfidf = transformer.fit_transform(counts)
|
||
>>> tfidf
|
||
<6x3 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.float64'>'
|
||
with 9 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
|
||
>>> tfidf.toarray()
|
||
array([[0.81940995, 0. , 0.57320793],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[0.47330339, 0.88089948, 0. ],
|
||
[0.58149261, 0. , 0.81355169]])
|
||
|
||
Each row is normalized to have unit Euclidean norm:
|
||
|
||
:math:`v_{norm} = \frac{v}{||v||_2} = \frac{v}{\sqrt{v{_1}^2 +
|
||
v{_2}^2 + \dots + v{_n}^2}}`
|
||
|
||
For example, we can compute the tf-idf of the first term in the first
|
||
document in the `counts` array as follows:
|
||
|
||
:math:`n = 6`
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{df}(t)_{\text{term1}} = 6`
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{idf}(t)_{\text{term1}} =
|
||
\log \frac{n}{\text{df}(t)} + 1 = \log(1)+1 = 1`
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{tf-idf}_{\text{term1}} = \text{tf} \times \text{idf} = 3 \times 1 = 3`
|
||
|
||
Now, if we repeat this computation for the remaining 2 terms in the document,
|
||
we get
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{tf-idf}_{\text{term2}} = 0 \times (\log(6/1)+1) = 0`
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{tf-idf}_{\text{term3}} = 1 \times (\log(6/2)+1) \approx 2.0986`
|
||
|
||
and the vector of raw tf-idfs:
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{tf-idf}_{\text{raw}} = [3, 0, 2.0986].`
|
||
|
||
|
||
Then, applying the Euclidean (L2) norm, we obtain the following tf-idfs
|
||
for document 1:
|
||
|
||
:math:`\frac{[3, 0, 2.0986]}{\sqrt{\big(3^2 + 0^2 + 2.0986^2\big)}}
|
||
= [ 0.819, 0, 0.573].`
|
||
|
||
Furthermore, the default parameter ``smooth_idf=True`` adds "1" to the numerator
|
||
and denominator as if an extra document was seen containing every term in the
|
||
collection exactly once, which prevents zero divisions:
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{idf}(t) = \log{\frac{1 + n}{1+\text{df}(t)}} + 1`
|
||
|
||
Using this modification, the tf-idf of the third term in document 1 changes to
|
||
1.8473:
|
||
|
||
:math:`\text{tf-idf}_{\text{term3}} = 1 \times \log(7/3)+1 \approx 1.8473`
|
||
|
||
And the L2-normalized tf-idf changes to
|
||
|
||
:math:`\frac{[3, 0, 1.8473]}{\sqrt{\big(3^2 + 0^2 + 1.8473^2\big)}}
|
||
= [0.8515, 0, 0.5243]`::
|
||
|
||
>>> transformer = TfidfTransformer()
|
||
>>> transformer.fit_transform(counts).toarray()
|
||
array([[0.85151335, 0. , 0.52433293],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[1. , 0. , 0. ],
|
||
[0.55422893, 0.83236428, 0. ],
|
||
[0.63035731, 0. , 0.77630514]])
|
||
|
||
The weights of each
|
||
feature computed by the ``fit`` method call are stored in a model
|
||
attribute::
|
||
|
||
>>> transformer.idf_
|
||
array([1. ..., 2.25..., 1.84...])
|
||
|
||
As tf-idf is very often used for text features, there is also another
|
||
class called :class:`TfidfVectorizer` that combines all the options of
|
||
:class:`CountVectorizer` and :class:`TfidfTransformer` in a single model::
|
||
|
||
>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction.text import TfidfVectorizer
|
||
>>> vectorizer = TfidfVectorizer()
|
||
>>> vectorizer.fit_transform(corpus)
|
||
<4x9 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.float64'>'
|
||
with 19 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
|
||
While the tf-idf normalization is often very useful, there might
|
||
be cases where the binary occurrence markers might offer better
|
||
features. This can be achieved by using the ``binary`` parameter
|
||
of :class:`CountVectorizer`. In particular, some estimators such as
|
||
:ref:`bernoulli_naive_bayes` explicitly model discrete boolean random
|
||
variables. Also, very short texts are likely to have noisy tf-idf values
|
||
while the binary occurrence info is more stable.
|
||
|
||
As usual the best way to adjust the feature extraction parameters
|
||
is to use a cross-validated grid search, for instance by pipelining the
|
||
feature extractor with a classifier:
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_model_selection_plot_grid_search_text_feature_extraction.py`
|
||
|
||
|
||
Decoding text files
|
||
-------------------
|
||
Text is made of characters, but files are made of bytes. These bytes represent
|
||
characters according to some *encoding*. To work with text files in Python,
|
||
their bytes must be *decoded* to a character set called Unicode.
|
||
Common encodings are ASCII, Latin-1 (Western Europe), KOI8-R (Russian)
|
||
and the universal encodings UTF-8 and UTF-16. Many others exist.
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
An encoding can also be called a 'character set',
|
||
but this term is less accurate: several encodings can exist
|
||
for a single character set.
|
||
|
||
The text feature extractors in scikit-learn know how to decode text files,
|
||
but only if you tell them what encoding the files are in.
|
||
The :class:`CountVectorizer` takes an ``encoding`` parameter for this purpose.
|
||
For modern text files, the correct encoding is probably UTF-8,
|
||
which is therefore the default (``encoding="utf-8"``).
|
||
|
||
If the text you are loading is not actually encoded with UTF-8, however,
|
||
you will get a ``UnicodeDecodeError``.
|
||
The vectorizers can be told to be silent about decoding errors
|
||
by setting the ``decode_error`` parameter to either ``"ignore"``
|
||
or ``"replace"``. See the documentation for the Python function
|
||
``bytes.decode`` for more details
|
||
(type ``help(bytes.decode)`` at the Python prompt).
|
||
|
||
.. dropdown:: Troubleshooting decoding text
|
||
|
||
If you are having trouble decoding text, here are some things to try:
|
||
|
||
- Find out what the actual encoding of the text is. The file might come
|
||
with a header or README that tells you the encoding, or there might be some
|
||
standard encoding you can assume based on where the text comes from.
|
||
|
||
- You may be able to find out what kind of encoding it is in general
|
||
using the UNIX command ``file``. The Python ``chardet`` module comes with
|
||
a script called ``chardetect.py`` that will guess the specific encoding,
|
||
though you cannot rely on its guess being correct.
|
||
|
||
- You could try UTF-8 and disregard the errors. You can decode byte
|
||
strings with ``bytes.decode(errors='replace')`` to replace all
|
||
decoding errors with a meaningless character, or set
|
||
``decode_error='replace'`` in the vectorizer. This may damage the
|
||
usefulness of your features.
|
||
|
||
- Real text may come from a variety of sources that may have used different
|
||
encodings, or even be sloppily decoded in a different encoding than the
|
||
one it was encoded with. This is common in text retrieved from the Web.
|
||
The Python package `ftfy <https://github.com/LuminosoInsight/python-ftfy>`__
|
||
can automatically sort out some classes of
|
||
decoding errors, so you could try decoding the unknown text as ``latin-1``
|
||
and then using ``ftfy`` to fix errors.
|
||
|
||
- If the text is in a mish-mash of encodings that is simply too hard to sort
|
||
out (which is the case for the 20 Newsgroups dataset), you can fall back on
|
||
a simple single-byte encoding such as ``latin-1``. Some text may display
|
||
incorrectly, but at least the same sequence of bytes will always represent
|
||
the same feature.
|
||
|
||
For example, the following snippet uses ``chardet``
|
||
(not shipped with scikit-learn, must be installed separately)
|
||
to figure out the encoding of three texts.
|
||
It then vectorizes the texts and prints the learned vocabulary.
|
||
The output is not shown here.
|
||
|
||
>>> import chardet # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
>>> text1 = b"Sei mir gegr\xc3\xbc\xc3\x9ft mein Sauerkraut"
|
||
>>> text2 = b"holdselig sind deine Ger\xfcche"
|
||
>>> text3 = b"\xff\xfeA\x00u\x00f\x00 \x00F\x00l\x00\xfc\x00g\x00e\x00l\x00n\x00 \x00d\x00e\x00s\x00 \x00G\x00e\x00s\x00a\x00n\x00g\x00e\x00s\x00,\x00 \x00H\x00e\x00r\x00z\x00l\x00i\x00e\x00b\x00c\x00h\x00e\x00n\x00,\x00 \x00t\x00r\x00a\x00g\x00 \x00i\x00c\x00h\x00 \x00d\x00i\x00c\x00h\x00 \x00f\x00o\x00r\x00t\x00"
|
||
>>> decoded = [x.decode(chardet.detect(x)['encoding'])
|
||
... for x in (text1, text2, text3)] # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
>>> v = CountVectorizer().fit(decoded).vocabulary_ # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
>>> for term in v: print(v) # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
|
||
(Depending on the version of ``chardet``, it might get the first one wrong.)
|
||
|
||
For an introduction to Unicode and character encodings in general,
|
||
see Joel Spolsky's `Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Must Know
|
||
About Unicode <https://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html>`_.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Applications and examples
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
The bag of words representation is quite simplistic but surprisingly
|
||
useful in practice.
|
||
|
||
In particular in a **supervised setting** it can be successfully combined
|
||
with fast and scalable linear models to train **document classifiers**,
|
||
for instance:
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_text_plot_document_classification_20newsgroups.py`
|
||
|
||
In an **unsupervised setting** it can be used to group similar documents
|
||
together by applying clustering algorithms such as :ref:`k_means`:
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_text_plot_document_clustering.py`
|
||
|
||
Finally it is possible to discover the main topics of a corpus by
|
||
relaxing the hard assignment constraint of clustering, for instance by
|
||
using :ref:`NMF`:
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_applications_plot_topics_extraction_with_nmf_lda.py`
|
||
|
||
|
||
Limitations of the Bag of Words representation
|
||
----------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
A collection of unigrams (what bag of words is) cannot capture phrases
|
||
and multi-word expressions, effectively disregarding any word order
|
||
dependence. Additionally, the bag of words model doesn't account for potential
|
||
misspellings or word derivations.
|
||
|
||
N-grams to the rescue! Instead of building a simple collection of
|
||
unigrams (n=1), one might prefer a collection of bigrams (n=2), where
|
||
occurrences of pairs of consecutive words are counted.
|
||
|
||
One might alternatively consider a collection of character n-grams, a
|
||
representation resilient against misspellings and derivations.
|
||
|
||
For example, let's say we're dealing with a corpus of two documents:
|
||
``['words', 'wprds']``. The second document contains a misspelling
|
||
of the word 'words'.
|
||
A simple bag of words representation would consider these two as
|
||
very distinct documents, differing in both of the two possible features.
|
||
A character 2-gram representation, however, would find the documents
|
||
matching in 4 out of 8 features, which may help the preferred classifier
|
||
decide better::
|
||
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer = CountVectorizer(analyzer='char_wb', ngram_range=(2, 2))
|
||
>>> counts = ngram_vectorizer.fit_transform(['words', 'wprds'])
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer.get_feature_names_out()
|
||
array([' w', 'ds', 'or', 'pr', 'rd', 's ', 'wo', 'wp'], ...)
|
||
>>> counts.toarray().astype(int)
|
||
array([[1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0],
|
||
[1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 1]])
|
||
|
||
In the above example, ``char_wb`` analyzer is used, which creates n-grams
|
||
only from characters inside word boundaries (padded with space on each
|
||
side). The ``char`` analyzer, alternatively, creates n-grams that
|
||
span across words::
|
||
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer = CountVectorizer(analyzer='char_wb', ngram_range=(5, 5))
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer.fit_transform(['jumpy fox'])
|
||
<1x4 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.int64'>'
|
||
with 4 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer.get_feature_names_out()
|
||
array([' fox ', ' jump', 'jumpy', 'umpy '], ...)
|
||
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer = CountVectorizer(analyzer='char', ngram_range=(5, 5))
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer.fit_transform(['jumpy fox'])
|
||
<1x5 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.int64'>'
|
||
with 5 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
>>> ngram_vectorizer.get_feature_names_out()
|
||
array(['jumpy', 'mpy f', 'py fo', 'umpy ', 'y fox'], ...)
|
||
|
||
The word boundaries-aware variant ``char_wb`` is especially interesting
|
||
for languages that use white-spaces for word separation as it generates
|
||
significantly less noisy features than the raw ``char`` variant in
|
||
that case. For such languages it can increase both the predictive
|
||
accuracy and convergence speed of classifiers trained using such
|
||
features while retaining the robustness with regards to misspellings and
|
||
word derivations.
|
||
|
||
While some local positioning information can be preserved by extracting
|
||
n-grams instead of individual words, bag of words and bag of n-grams
|
||
destroy most of the inner structure of the document and hence most of
|
||
the meaning carried by that internal structure.
|
||
|
||
In order to address the wider task of Natural Language Understanding,
|
||
the local structure of sentences and paragraphs should thus be taken
|
||
into account. Many such models will thus be casted as "Structured output"
|
||
problems which are currently outside of the scope of scikit-learn.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _hashing_vectorizer:
|
||
|
||
Vectorizing a large text corpus with the hashing trick
|
||
------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
The above vectorization scheme is simple but the fact that it holds an **in-
|
||
memory mapping from the string tokens to the integer feature indices** (the
|
||
``vocabulary_`` attribute) causes several **problems when dealing with large
|
||
datasets**:
|
||
|
||
- the larger the corpus, the larger the vocabulary will grow and hence the
|
||
memory use too,
|
||
|
||
- fitting requires the allocation of intermediate data structures
|
||
of size proportional to that of the original dataset.
|
||
|
||
- building the word-mapping requires a full pass over the dataset hence it is
|
||
not possible to fit text classifiers in a strictly online manner.
|
||
|
||
- pickling and un-pickling vectorizers with a large ``vocabulary_`` can be very
|
||
slow (typically much slower than pickling / un-pickling flat data structures
|
||
such as a NumPy array of the same size),
|
||
|
||
- it is not easily possible to split the vectorization work into concurrent sub
|
||
tasks as the ``vocabulary_`` attribute would have to be a shared state with a
|
||
fine grained synchronization barrier: the mapping from token string to
|
||
feature index is dependent on ordering of the first occurrence of each token
|
||
hence would have to be shared, potentially harming the concurrent workers'
|
||
performance to the point of making them slower than the sequential variant.
|
||
|
||
It is possible to overcome those limitations by combining the "hashing trick"
|
||
(:ref:`Feature_hashing`) implemented by the
|
||
:class:`~sklearn.feature_extraction.FeatureHasher` class and the text
|
||
preprocessing and tokenization features of the :class:`CountVectorizer`.
|
||
|
||
This combination is implementing in :class:`HashingVectorizer`,
|
||
a transformer class that is mostly API compatible with :class:`CountVectorizer`.
|
||
:class:`HashingVectorizer` is stateless,
|
||
meaning that you don't have to call ``fit`` on it::
|
||
|
||
>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction.text import HashingVectorizer
|
||
>>> hv = HashingVectorizer(n_features=10)
|
||
>>> hv.transform(corpus)
|
||
<4x10 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.float64'>'
|
||
with 16 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
|
||
You can see that 16 non-zero feature tokens were extracted in the vector
|
||
output: this is less than the 19 non-zeros extracted previously by the
|
||
:class:`CountVectorizer` on the same toy corpus. The discrepancy comes from
|
||
hash function collisions because of the low value of the ``n_features`` parameter.
|
||
|
||
In a real world setting, the ``n_features`` parameter can be left to its
|
||
default value of ``2 ** 20`` (roughly one million possible features). If memory
|
||
or downstream models size is an issue selecting a lower value such as ``2 **
|
||
18`` might help without introducing too many additional collisions on typical
|
||
text classification tasks.
|
||
|
||
Note that the dimensionality does not affect the CPU training time of
|
||
algorithms which operate on CSR matrices (``LinearSVC(dual=True)``,
|
||
``Perceptron``, ``SGDClassifier``, ``PassiveAggressive``) but it does for
|
||
algorithms that work with CSC matrices (``LinearSVC(dual=False)``, ``Lasso()``,
|
||
etc.).
|
||
|
||
Let's try again with the default setting::
|
||
|
||
>>> hv = HashingVectorizer()
|
||
>>> hv.transform(corpus)
|
||
<4x1048576 sparse matrix of type '<... 'numpy.float64'>'
|
||
with 19 stored elements in Compressed Sparse ... format>
|
||
|
||
We no longer get the collisions, but this comes at the expense of a much larger
|
||
dimensionality of the output space.
|
||
Of course, other terms than the 19 used here
|
||
might still collide with each other.
|
||
|
||
The :class:`HashingVectorizer` also comes with the following limitations:
|
||
|
||
- it is not possible to invert the model (no ``inverse_transform`` method),
|
||
nor to access the original string representation of the features,
|
||
because of the one-way nature of the hash function that performs the mapping.
|
||
|
||
- it does not provide IDF weighting as that would introduce statefulness in the
|
||
model. A :class:`TfidfTransformer` can be appended to it in a pipeline if
|
||
required.
|
||
|
||
.. dropdown:: Performing out-of-core scaling with HashingVectorizer
|
||
|
||
An interesting development of using a :class:`HashingVectorizer` is the ability
|
||
to perform `out-of-core`_ scaling. This means that we can learn from data that
|
||
does not fit into the computer's main memory.
|
||
|
||
.. _out-of-core: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Out-of-core_algorithm
|
||
|
||
A strategy to implement out-of-core scaling is to stream data to the estimator
|
||
in mini-batches. Each mini-batch is vectorized using :class:`HashingVectorizer`
|
||
so as to guarantee that the input space of the estimator has always the same
|
||
dimensionality. The amount of memory used at any time is thus bounded by the
|
||
size of a mini-batch. Although there is no limit to the amount of data that can
|
||
be ingested using such an approach, from a practical point of view the learning
|
||
time is often limited by the CPU time one wants to spend on the task.
|
||
|
||
For a full-fledged example of out-of-core scaling in a text classification
|
||
task see :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_applications_plot_out_of_core_classification.py`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Customizing the vectorizer classes
|
||
----------------------------------
|
||
|
||
It is possible to customize the behavior by passing a callable
|
||
to the vectorizer constructor::
|
||
|
||
>>> def my_tokenizer(s):
|
||
... return s.split()
|
||
...
|
||
>>> vectorizer = CountVectorizer(tokenizer=my_tokenizer)
|
||
>>> vectorizer.build_analyzer()(u"Some... punctuation!") == (
|
||
... ['some...', 'punctuation!'])
|
||
True
|
||
|
||
In particular we name:
|
||
|
||
* ``preprocessor``: a callable that takes an entire document as input (as a
|
||
single string), and returns a possibly transformed version of the document,
|
||
still as an entire string. This can be used to remove HTML tags, lowercase
|
||
the entire document, etc.
|
||
|
||
* ``tokenizer``: a callable that takes the output from the preprocessor
|
||
and splits it into tokens, then returns a list of these.
|
||
|
||
* ``analyzer``: a callable that replaces the preprocessor and tokenizer.
|
||
The default analyzers all call the preprocessor and tokenizer, but custom
|
||
analyzers will skip this. N-gram extraction and stop word filtering take
|
||
place at the analyzer level, so a custom analyzer may have to reproduce
|
||
these steps.
|
||
|
||
(Lucene users might recognize these names, but be aware that scikit-learn
|
||
concepts may not map one-to-one onto Lucene concepts.)
|
||
|
||
To make the preprocessor, tokenizer and analyzers aware of the model
|
||
parameters it is possible to derive from the class and override the
|
||
``build_preprocessor``, ``build_tokenizer`` and ``build_analyzer``
|
||
factory methods instead of passing custom functions.
|
||
|
||
.. dropdown:: Tips and tricks
|
||
:color: success
|
||
|
||
* If documents are pre-tokenized by an external package, then store them in
|
||
files (or strings) with the tokens separated by whitespace and pass
|
||
``analyzer=str.split``
|
||
* Fancy token-level analysis such as stemming, lemmatizing, compound
|
||
splitting, filtering based on part-of-speech, etc. are not included in the
|
||
scikit-learn codebase, but can be added by customizing either the
|
||
tokenizer or the analyzer.
|
||
Here's a ``CountVectorizer`` with a tokenizer and lemmatizer using
|
||
`NLTK <https://www.nltk.org/>`_::
|
||
|
||
>>> from nltk import word_tokenize # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
>>> from nltk.stem import WordNetLemmatizer # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
>>> class LemmaTokenizer:
|
||
... def __init__(self):
|
||
... self.wnl = WordNetLemmatizer()
|
||
... def __call__(self, doc):
|
||
... return [self.wnl.lemmatize(t) for t in word_tokenize(doc)]
|
||
...
|
||
>>> vect = CountVectorizer(tokenizer=LemmaTokenizer()) # doctest: +SKIP
|
||
|
||
(Note that this will not filter out punctuation.)
|
||
|
||
The following example will, for instance, transform some British spelling
|
||
to American spelling::
|
||
|
||
>>> import re
|
||
>>> def to_british(tokens):
|
||
... for t in tokens:
|
||
... t = re.sub(r"(...)our$", r"\1or", t)
|
||
... t = re.sub(r"([bt])re$", r"\1er", t)
|
||
... t = re.sub(r"([iy])s(e$|ing|ation)", r"\1z\2", t)
|
||
... t = re.sub(r"ogue$", "og", t)
|
||
... yield t
|
||
...
|
||
>>> class CustomVectorizer(CountVectorizer):
|
||
... def build_tokenizer(self):
|
||
... tokenize = super().build_tokenizer()
|
||
... return lambda doc: list(to_british(tokenize(doc)))
|
||
...
|
||
>>> print(CustomVectorizer().build_analyzer()(u"color colour"))
|
||
[...'color', ...'color']
|
||
|
||
for other styles of preprocessing; examples include stemming, lemmatization,
|
||
or normalizing numerical tokens, with the latter illustrated in:
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_bicluster_plot_bicluster_newsgroups.py`
|
||
|
||
Customizing the vectorizer can also be useful when handling Asian languages
|
||
that do not use an explicit word separator such as whitespace.
|
||
|
||
.. _image_feature_extraction:
|
||
|
||
Image feature extraction
|
||
========================
|
||
|
||
.. currentmodule:: sklearn.feature_extraction.image
|
||
|
||
Patch extraction
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
The :func:`extract_patches_2d` function extracts patches from an image stored
|
||
as a two-dimensional array, or three-dimensional with color information along
|
||
the third axis. For rebuilding an image from all its patches, use
|
||
:func:`reconstruct_from_patches_2d`. For example let us generate a 4x4 pixel
|
||
picture with 3 color channels (e.g. in RGB format)::
|
||
|
||
>>> import numpy as np
|
||
>>> from sklearn.feature_extraction import image
|
||
|
||
>>> one_image = np.arange(4 * 4 * 3).reshape((4, 4, 3))
|
||
>>> one_image[:, :, 0] # R channel of a fake RGB picture
|
||
array([[ 0, 3, 6, 9],
|
||
[12, 15, 18, 21],
|
||
[24, 27, 30, 33],
|
||
[36, 39, 42, 45]])
|
||
|
||
>>> patches = image.extract_patches_2d(one_image, (2, 2), max_patches=2,
|
||
... random_state=0)
|
||
>>> patches.shape
|
||
(2, 2, 2, 3)
|
||
>>> patches[:, :, :, 0]
|
||
array([[[ 0, 3],
|
||
[12, 15]],
|
||
<BLANKLINE>
|
||
[[15, 18],
|
||
[27, 30]]])
|
||
>>> patches = image.extract_patches_2d(one_image, (2, 2))
|
||
>>> patches.shape
|
||
(9, 2, 2, 3)
|
||
>>> patches[4, :, :, 0]
|
||
array([[15, 18],
|
||
[27, 30]])
|
||
|
||
Let us now try to reconstruct the original image from the patches by averaging
|
||
on overlapping areas::
|
||
|
||
>>> reconstructed = image.reconstruct_from_patches_2d(patches, (4, 4, 3))
|
||
>>> np.testing.assert_array_equal(one_image, reconstructed)
|
||
|
||
The :class:`PatchExtractor` class works in the same way as
|
||
:func:`extract_patches_2d`, only it supports multiple images as input. It is
|
||
implemented as a scikit-learn transformer, so it can be used in pipelines. See::
|
||
|
||
>>> five_images = np.arange(5 * 4 * 4 * 3).reshape(5, 4, 4, 3)
|
||
>>> patches = image.PatchExtractor(patch_size=(2, 2)).transform(five_images)
|
||
>>> patches.shape
|
||
(45, 2, 2, 3)
|
||
|
||
Connectivity graph of an image
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Several estimators in the scikit-learn can use connectivity information between
|
||
features or samples. For instance Ward clustering
|
||
(:ref:`hierarchical_clustering`) can cluster together only neighboring pixels
|
||
of an image, thus forming contiguous patches:
|
||
|
||
.. figure:: ../auto_examples/cluster/images/sphx_glr_plot_coin_ward_segmentation_001.png
|
||
:target: ../auto_examples/cluster/plot_coin_ward_segmentation.html
|
||
:align: center
|
||
:scale: 40
|
||
|
||
For this purpose, the estimators use a 'connectivity' matrix, giving
|
||
which samples are connected.
|
||
|
||
The function :func:`img_to_graph` returns such a matrix from a 2D or 3D
|
||
image. Similarly, :func:`grid_to_graph` build a connectivity matrix for
|
||
images given the shape of these image.
|
||
|
||
These matrices can be used to impose connectivity in estimators that use
|
||
connectivity information, such as Ward clustering
|
||
(:ref:`hierarchical_clustering`), but also to build precomputed kernels,
|
||
or similarity matrices.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: **Examples**
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_cluster_plot_coin_ward_segmentation.py`
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_cluster_plot_segmentation_toy.py`
|
||
|
||
* :ref:`sphx_glr_auto_examples_cluster_plot_feature_agglomeration_vs_univariate_selection.py`
|