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Pandas integration with sklearn

Project description

This module provides a bridge between Scikit-Learn’s machine learning methods and pandas-style Data Frames.

In particular, it provides:

  1. a way to map DataFrame columns to transformations, which are later recombined into features

  2. a way to cross-validate a pipeline that takes a pandas DataFrame as input.

Installation

You can install sklearn-pandas with pip:

# pip install sklearn-pandas

Tests

The examples in this file double as basic sanity tests. To run them, use doctest, which is included with python:

# python -m doctest README.rst

Usage

Import

Import what you need from the sklearn_pandas package. The choices are:

  • DataFrameMapper, a class for mapping pandas data frame columns to different sklearn transformations

  • cross_val_score, similar to sklearn.cross_validation.cross_val_score but working on pandas DataFrames

For this demonstration, we will import both:

>>> from sklearn_pandas import DataFrameMapper, cross_val_score

For these examples, we’ll also use pandas and sklearn:

>>> import pandas as pd
>>> import sklearn.preprocessing, sklearn.decomposition, \
...     sklearn.linear_model, sklearn.pipeline, sklearn.metrics

Load some Data

Normally you’ll read the data from a file, but for demonstration purposes I’ll create a data frame from a Python dict:

>>> data = pd.DataFrame({'pet':      ['cat', 'dog', 'dog', 'fish', 'cat', 'dog', 'cat', 'fish'],
...                      'children': [4., 6, 3, 3, 2, 3, 5, 4],
...                      'salary':   [90, 24, 44, 27, 32, 59, 36, 27]})

Transformation Mapping

Map the Columns to Transformations

The mapper takes a list of pairs. The first is a column name from the pandas DataFrame (or a list of multiple columns, as we will see later). The second is an object which will perform the transformation which will be applied to that column:

>>> mapper = DataFrameMapper([
...     ('pet', sklearn.preprocessing.LabelBinarizer()),
...     ('children', sklearn.preprocessing.StandardScaler())
... ])

Test the Transformation

We can use the fit_transform shortcut to both fit the model and see what transformed data looks like:

>>> mapper.fit_transform(data)
array([[ 1.        ,  0.        ,  0.        ,  0.20851441],
       [ 0.        ,  1.        ,  0.        ,  1.87662973],
       [ 0.        ,  1.        ,  0.        , -0.62554324],
       [ 0.        ,  0.        ,  1.        , -0.62554324],
       [ 1.        ,  0.        ,  0.        , -1.4596009 ],
       [ 0.        ,  1.        ,  0.        , -0.62554324],
       [ 1.        ,  0.        ,  0.        ,  1.04257207],
       [ 0.        ,  0.        ,  1.        ,  0.20851441]])

Note that the first three columns are the output of the LabelBinarizer (corresponding to _cat_, _dog_, and _fish_ respectively) and the fourth column is the standardized value for the number of children. In general, the columns are ordered according to the order given when the DataFrameMapper is constructed.

Now that the transformation is trained, we confirm that it works on new data:

>>> mapper.transform({'pet': ['cat'], 'children': [5.]})
array([[ 1.        ,  0.        ,  0.        ,  1.04257207]])

Transform Multiple Columns

Transformations may require multiple input columns. In these cases, the column names can be specified in a list:

>>> mapper2 = DataFrameMapper([
...     (['children', 'salary'], sklearn.decomposition.PCA(1))
... ])

Now running fit_transform will run PCA on the children and salary columns and return the first principal component:

>>> mapper2.fit_transform(data)
array([[ 47.62288153],
       [-18.38596516],
       [  1.62873661],
       [-15.3709553 ],
       [-10.36602451],
       [ 16.62846476],
       [ -6.38116123],
       [-15.37597671]])

Cross-Validation

Now that we can combine features from pandas DataFrames, we may want to use cross-validation to see whether our model works. Scikit-learn provides features for cross-validation, but they expect numpy data structures and won’t work with DataFrameMapper.

To get around this, sklearn-pandas provides a wrapper on sklearn’s cross_val_score function which passes a pandas DataFrame to the estimator rather than a numpy array:

>>> pipe = sklearn.pipeline.Pipeline([
...     ('featurize', mapper),
...     ('lm', sklearn.linear_model.LinearRegression())])
>>> cross_val_score(pipe, data, data.salary, sklearn.metrics.mean_squared_error)
array([ 2018.185     ,     6.72033058,  1899.58333333])

Sklearn-pandas’ cross_val_score function provides exactly the same interface as sklearn’s function of the same name.

Credit

The code for DataFrameMapper is based on code originally written by Ben Hamner.

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