Gaussian Processes regression: goodness-of-fit on the ‘diabetes’ dataset¶
In this example, we fit a Gaussian Process model onto the diabetes dataset.
We determine the correlation parameters with maximum likelihood estimation (MLE). We use an anisotropic squared exponential correlation model with a constant regression model. We also use a nugget of 1e-2 to account for the (strong) noise in the targets.
We compute a cross-validation estimate of the coefficient of determination (R2) without reperforming MLE, using the set of correlation parameters found on the whole dataset.
Python source code: gp_diabetes_dataset.py
print(__doc__)
# Author: Vincent Dubourg <vincent.dubourg@gmail.com>
# Licence: BSD 3 clause
from sklearn import datasets
from sklearn.gaussian_process import GaussianProcess
from sklearn.cross_validation import cross_val_score, KFold
# Load the dataset from scikit's data sets
diabetes = datasets.load_diabetes()
X, y = diabetes.data, diabetes.target
# Instanciate a GP model
gp = GaussianProcess(regr='constant', corr='absolute_exponential',
theta0=[1e-4] * 10, thetaL=[1e-12] * 10,
thetaU=[1e-2] * 10, nugget=1e-2, optimizer='Welch')
# Fit the GP model to the data performing maximum likelihood estimation
gp.fit(X, y)
# Deactivate maximum likelihood estimation for the cross-validation loop
gp.theta0 = gp.theta_ # Given correlation parameter = MLE
gp.thetaL, gp.thetaU = None, None # None bounds deactivate MLE
# Perform a cross-validation estimate of the coefficient of determination using
# the cross_validation module using all CPUs available on the machine
K = 20 # folds
R2 = cross_val_score(gp, X, y=y, cv=KFold(y.size, K), n_jobs=1).mean()
print("The %d-Folds estimate of the coefficient of determination is R2 = %s"
% (K, R2))