Generate cross-validated estimates for each input data point.
The data is split according to the cv parameter. Each sample belongs to exactly one test set, and its prediction is computed with an estimator fitted on the corresponding training set.
Passing these predictions into an evaluation metric may not be a valid way to measure generalization performance. Results can differ from cross_validate
and cross_val_score
unless all tests sets have equal size and the metric decomposes over samples.
Read more in the User Guide.
The estimator instance to use to fit the data. It must implement a fit
method and the method given by the method
parameter.
The data to fit. Can be, for example a list, or an array at least 2d.
The target variable to try to predict in the case of supervised learning.
Group labels for the samples used while splitting the dataset into train/test set. Only used in conjunction with a “Group” cv instance (e.g., GroupKFold
).
Changed in version 1.4: groups
can only be passed if metadata routing is not enabled via sklearn.set_config(enable_metadata_routing=True)
. When routing is enabled, pass groups
alongside other metadata via the params
argument instead. E.g.: cross_val_predict(..., params={'groups': groups})
.
Determines the cross-validation splitting strategy. Possible inputs for cv are:
None, to use the default 5-fold cross validation,
int, to specify the number of folds in a (Stratified)KFold
,
An iterable that generates (train, test) splits as arrays of indices.
For int/None inputs, if the estimator is a classifier and y
is either binary or multiclass, StratifiedKFold
is used. In all other cases, KFold
is used. These splitters are instantiated with shuffle=False
so the splits will be the same across calls.
Refer User Guide for the various cross-validation strategies that can be used here.
Changed in version 0.22: cv
default value if None changed from 3-fold to 5-fold.
Number of jobs to run in parallel. Training the estimator and predicting are parallelized over the cross-validation splits. None
means 1 unless in a joblib.parallel_backend
context. -1
means using all processors. See Glossary for more details.
The verbosity level.
Parameters to pass to the underlying estimator’s fit
and the CV splitter.
Added in version 1.4.
Controls the number of jobs that get dispatched during parallel execution. Reducing this number can be useful to avoid an explosion of memory consumption when more jobs get dispatched than CPUs can process. This parameter can be:
None, in which case all the jobs are immediately created and spawned. Use this for lightweight and fast-running jobs, to avoid delays due to on-demand spawning of the jobs
An int, giving the exact number of total jobs that are spawned
A str, giving an expression as a function of n_jobs, as in ‘2*n_jobs’
The method to be invoked by estimator
.
This is the result of calling method
. Shape:
When method
is ‘predict’ and in special case where method
is ‘decision_function’ and the target is binary: (n_samples,)
When method
is one of {‘predict_proba’, ‘predict_log_proba’, ‘decision_function’} (unless special case above): (n_samples, n_classes)
If estimator
is multioutput, an extra dimension ‘n_outputs’ is added to the end of each shape above.
Notes
In the case that one or more classes are absent in a training portion, a default score needs to be assigned to all instances for that class if method
produces columns per class, as in {‘decision_function’, ‘predict_proba’, ‘predict_log_proba’}. For predict_proba
this value is 0. In order to ensure finite output, we approximate negative infinity by the minimum finite float value for the dtype in other cases.
Examples
>>> from sklearn import datasets, linear_model >>> from sklearn.model_selection import cross_val_predict >>> diabetes = datasets.load_diabetes() >>> X = diabetes.data[:150] >>> y = diabetes.target[:150] >>> lasso = linear_model.Lasso() >>> y_pred = cross_val_predict(lasso, X, y, cv=3)
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4