Warning: This documentation is for scikits.learn version 0.7.1. — Latest stable version

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Classification of text documents: using a MLComp datasetΒΆ

This is an example showing how the scikit-learn can be used to classify documents by topics using a bag-of-words approach. This example uses a scipy.sparse matrix to store the features instead of standard numpy arrays.

The dataset used in this example is the 20 newsgroups dataset and should be downloaded from the http://mlcomp.org (free registration required):

Once downloaded unzip the arhive somewhere on your filesystem. For instance in:

% mkdir -p ~/data/mlcomp
% cd  ~/data/mlcomp
% unzip /path/to/dataset-379-20news-18828_XXXXX.zip

You should get a folder ~/data/mlcomp/379 with a file named metadata and subfolders raw, train and test holding the text documents organized by newsgroups.

Then set the MLCOMP_DATASETS_HOME environment variable pointing to the root folder holding the uncompressed archive:

% export MLCOMP_DATASETS_HOME="~/data/mlcomp"

Then you are ready to run this example using your favorite python shell:

% ipython examples/mlcomp_sparse_document_classification.py

Python source code: mlcomp_sparse_document_classification.py

print __doc__

# Author: Olivier Grisel <olivier.grisel@ensta.org>
# License: Simplified BSD

from time import time
import sys
import os
import numpy as np
import scipy.sparse as sp
import pylab as pl

from scikits.learn.datasets import load_mlcomp
from scikits.learn.feature_extraction.text.sparse import Vectorizer
from scikits.learn.linear_model.sparse import SGDClassifier
from scikits.learn.metrics import confusion_matrix
from scikits.learn.metrics import classification_report

if 'MLCOMP_DATASETS_HOME' not in os.environ:
    print "Please follow those instructions to get started:"
    sys.exit(0)

# Load the training set
print "Loading 20 newsgroups training set... "
news_train = load_mlcomp('20news-18828', 'train')
print news_train.DESCR
print "%d documents" % len(news_train.filenames)
print "%d categories" % len(news_train.target_names)

print "Extracting features from the dataset using a sparse vectorizer"
t0 = time()
vectorizer = Vectorizer()
X_train = vectorizer.fit_transform((open(f).read()
                                    for f in news_train.filenames))
print "done in %fs" % (time() - t0)
print "n_samples: %d, n_features: %d" % X_train.shape
assert sp.issparse(X_train)
y_train = news_train.target

print "Training a linear classifier..."
parameters = {
    'loss': 'hinge',
    'penalty': 'l2',
    'n_iter': 50,
    'alpha': 0.00001,
    'fit_intercept': True,
}
print "parameters:", parameters
t0 = time()
clf = SGDClassifier(**parameters).fit(X_train, y_train)
print "done in %fs" % (time() - t0)
print "Percentage of non zeros coef: %f" % (np.mean(clf.coef_ != 0) * 100)

print "Loading 20 newsgroups test set... "
news_test = load_mlcomp('20news-18828', 'test')
t0 = time()
print "done in %fs" % (time() - t0)

print "Predicting the labels of the test set..."
print "%d documents" % len(news_test.filenames)
print "%d categories" % len(news_test.target_names)

print "Extracting features from the dataset using the same vectorizer"
t0 = time()
X_test = vectorizer.transform((open(f).read() for f in news_test.filenames))
y_test = news_test.target
print "done in %fs" % (time() - t0)
print "n_samples: %d, n_features: %d" % X_test.shape

print "Predicting the outcomes of the testing set"
t0 = time()
pred = clf.predict(X_test)
print "done in %fs" % (time() - t0)

print "Classification report on test set for classifier:"
print clf
print
print classification_report(y_test, pred, class_names=news_test.target_names)

cm = confusion_matrix(y_test, pred)
print "Confusion matrix:"
print cm

# Show confusion matrix
pl.matshow(cm)
pl.title('Confusion matrix')
pl.colorbar()
pl.show()