Plotting decision boundary for High Dimension Data

£可爱£侵袭症+ 提交于 2019-12-18 11:55:17

问题


I am building a model for binary classification problem where each of my data points is of 300 dimensions (I am using 300 features). I am using a PassiveAggressiveClassifier from sklearn. The model is performing really well.

I wish to plot the decision boundary of the model. How can I do so ?

To get a sense of the data, I am plotting it in 2D using TSNE. I reduced the dimensions of the data in 2 steps - from 300 to 50, then from 50 to 2 (this is a common recomendation). Below is the code snippet for the same :

from sklearn.manifold import TSNE
from sklearn.decomposition import TruncatedSVD

X_Train_reduced = TruncatedSVD(n_components=50, random_state=0).fit_transform(X_train)
X_Train_embedded = TSNE(n_components=2, perplexity=40, verbose=2).fit_transform(X_Train_reduced)

#some convert lists of lists to 2 dataframes (df_train_neg, df_train_pos) depending on the label - 

#plot the negative points and positive points
scatter(df_train_neg.val1, df_train_neg.val2, marker='o', c='red')
scatter(df_train_pos.val1, df_train_pos.val2, marker='x', c='green')

I get a decent graph.

Is there a way that I can add a decision boundary to this plot which represents the actual decision boundary of my model in the 300 dim space ?


回答1:


One way is to impose a Voronoi tesselation on your 2D plot, i.e. color it based on proximity to the 2D data points (different colors for each predicted class label). See recent paper by Migut et al., 2015.

This is a lot easier than it sounds using a meshgrid and scikit's KNeighborsClassifier (this is an end to end example with the Iris dataset; replace the first few lines with your model/code):

import numpy as np, matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from sklearn.neighbors.classification import KNeighborsClassifier
from sklearn.datasets.base import load_iris
from sklearn.manifold.t_sne import TSNE
from sklearn.linear_model.logistic import LogisticRegression

# replace the below by your data and model
iris = load_iris()
X,y = iris.data, iris.target
X_Train_embedded = TSNE(n_components=2).fit_transform(X)
print X_Train_embedded.shape
model = LogisticRegression().fit(X,y)
y_predicted = model.predict(X)
# replace the above by your data and model

# create meshgrid
resolution = 100 # 100x100 background pixels
X2d_xmin, X2d_xmax = np.min(X_Train_embedded[:,0]), np.max(X_Train_embedded[:,0])
X2d_ymin, X2d_ymax = np.min(X_Train_embedded[:,1]), np.max(X_Train_embedded[:,1])
xx, yy = np.meshgrid(np.linspace(X2d_xmin, X2d_xmax, resolution), np.linspace(X2d_ymin, X2d_ymax, resolution))

# approximate Voronoi tesselation on resolution x resolution grid using 1-NN
background_model = KNeighborsClassifier(n_neighbors=1).fit(X_Train_embedded, y_predicted) 
voronoiBackground = background_model.predict(np.c_[xx.ravel(), yy.ravel()])
voronoiBackground = voronoiBackground.reshape((resolution, resolution))

#plot
plt.contourf(xx, yy, voronoiBackground)
plt.scatter(X_Train_embedded[:,0], X_Train_embedded[:,1], c=y)
plt.show()

Note that rather than precisely plotting your decision boundary, this will just give you an estimate of roughly where the boundary should lie (especially in regions with few data points, the true boundary can deviate from this). It will draw a line between two data points belonging to different classes, but will place it in the middle (there is indeed guaranteed to be a decision boundary between those points in this case, but it does not necessarily have to be in the middle).

There are also some experimental approaches to better approximate the true decision boundary, e.g. this one on github



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37718347/plotting-decision-boundary-for-high-dimension-data

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