sklearn.feature_selection
.SequentialFeatureSelector¶
- class sklearn.feature_selection.SequentialFeatureSelector(estimator, *, n_features_to_select='warn', tol=None, direction='forward', scoring=None, cv=5, n_jobs=None)[source]¶
Transformer that performs Sequential Feature Selection.
This Sequential Feature Selector adds (forward selection) or removes (backward selection) features to form a feature subset in a greedy fashion. At each stage, this estimator chooses the best feature to add or remove based on the cross-validation score of an estimator. In the case of unsupervised learning, this Sequential Feature Selector looks only at the features (X), not the desired outputs (y).
Read more in the User Guide.
New in version 0.24.
- Parameters:
- estimatorestimator instance
An unfitted estimator.
- n_features_to_select“auto”, int or float, default=’warn’
If
"auto"
, the behaviour depends on thetol
parameter:if
tol
is notNone
, then features are selected until the score improvement does not exceedtol
.otherwise, half of the features are selected.
If integer, the parameter is the absolute number of features to select. If float between 0 and 1, it is the fraction of features to select.
New in version 1.1: The option
"auto"
was added in version 1.1.Deprecated since version 1.1: The default changed from
None
to"warn"
in 1.1 and will become"auto"
in 1.3.None
and'warn'
will be removed in 1.3. To keep the same behaviour asNone
, setn_features_to_select="auto" and `tol=None
.- tolfloat, default=None
If the score is not incremented by at least
tol
between two consecutive feature additions or removals, stop adding or removing.tol
can be negative when removing features usingdirection="backward"
. It can be useful to reduce the number of features at the cost of a small decrease in the score.tol
is enabled only whenn_features_to_select
is"auto"
.New in version 1.1.
- direction{‘forward’, ‘backward’}, default=’forward’
Whether to perform forward selection or backward selection.
- scoringstr or callable, default=None
A single str (see The scoring parameter: defining model evaluation rules) or a callable (see Defining your scoring strategy from metric functions) to evaluate the predictions on the test set.
NOTE that when using a custom scorer, it should return a single value.
If None, the estimator’s score method is used.
- cvint, cross-validation generator or an iterable, default=None
Determines the cross-validation splitting strategy. Possible inputs for cv are:
None, to use the default 5-fold cross validation,
integer, to specify the number of folds in a
(Stratified)KFold
,An iterable yielding (train, test) splits as arrays of indices.
For integer/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 withshuffle=False
so the splits will be the same across calls.Refer User Guide for the various cross-validation strategies that can be used here.
- n_jobsint, default=None
Number of jobs to run in parallel. When evaluating a new feature to add or remove, the cross-validation procedure is parallel over the folds.
None
means 1 unless in ajoblib.parallel_backend
context.-1
means using all processors. See Glossary for more details.
- Attributes:
- n_features_in_int
Number of features seen during fit. Only defined if the underlying estimator exposes such an attribute when fit.
New in version 0.24.
- feature_names_in_ndarray of shape (
n_features_in_
,) Names of features seen during fit. Defined only when
X
has feature names that are all strings.New in version 1.0.
- n_features_to_select_int
The number of features that were selected.
- support_ndarray of shape (n_features,), dtype=bool
The mask of selected features.
See also
GenericUnivariateSelect
Univariate feature selector with configurable strategy.
RFE
Recursive feature elimination based on importance weights.
RFECV
Recursive feature elimination based on importance weights, with automatic selection of the number of features.
SelectFromModel
Feature selection based on thresholds of importance weights.
Examples
>>> from sklearn.feature_selection import SequentialFeatureSelector >>> from sklearn.neighbors import KNeighborsClassifier >>> from sklearn.datasets import load_iris >>> X, y = load_iris(return_X_y=True) >>> knn = KNeighborsClassifier(n_neighbors=3) >>> sfs = SequentialFeatureSelector(knn, n_features_to_select=3) >>> sfs.fit(X, y) SequentialFeatureSelector(estimator=KNeighborsClassifier(n_neighbors=3), n_features_to_select=3) >>> sfs.get_support() array([ True, False, True, True]) >>> sfs.transform(X).shape (150, 3)
Methods
fit
(X[, y])Learn the features to select from X.
fit_transform
(X[, y])Fit to data, then transform it.
get_feature_names_out
([input_features])Mask feature names according to selected features.
get_params
([deep])Get parameters for this estimator.
get_support
([indices])Get a mask, or integer index, of the features selected.
Reverse the transformation operation.
set_output
(*[, transform])Set output container.
set_params
(**params)Set the parameters of this estimator.
transform
(X)Reduce X to the selected features.
- fit(X, y=None)[source]¶
Learn the features to select from X.
- Parameters:
- Xarray-like of shape (n_samples, n_features)
Training vectors, where
n_samples
is the number of samples andn_features
is the number of predictors.- yarray-like of shape (n_samples,), default=None
Target values. This parameter may be ignored for unsupervised learning.
- Returns:
- selfobject
Returns the instance itself.
- fit_transform(X, y=None, **fit_params)[source]¶
Fit to data, then transform it.
Fits transformer to
X
andy
with optional parametersfit_params
and returns a transformed version ofX
.- Parameters:
- Xarray-like of shape (n_samples, n_features)
Input samples.
- yarray-like of shape (n_samples,) or (n_samples, n_outputs), default=None
Target values (None for unsupervised transformations).
- **fit_paramsdict
Additional fit parameters.
- Returns:
- X_newndarray array of shape (n_samples, n_features_new)
Transformed array.
- get_feature_names_out(input_features=None)[source]¶
Mask feature names according to selected features.
- Parameters:
- input_featuresarray-like of str or None, default=None
Input features.
If
input_features
isNone
, thenfeature_names_in_
is used as feature names in. Iffeature_names_in_
is not defined, then the following input feature names are generated:["x0", "x1", ..., "x(n_features_in_ - 1)"]
.If
input_features
is an array-like, theninput_features
must matchfeature_names_in_
iffeature_names_in_
is defined.
- Returns:
- feature_names_outndarray of str objects
Transformed feature names.
- get_params(deep=True)[source]¶
Get parameters for this estimator.
- Parameters:
- deepbool, default=True
If True, will return the parameters for this estimator and contained subobjects that are estimators.
- Returns:
- paramsdict
Parameter names mapped to their values.
- get_support(indices=False)[source]¶
Get a mask, or integer index, of the features selected.
- Parameters:
- indicesbool, default=False
If True, the return value will be an array of integers, rather than a boolean mask.
- Returns:
- supportarray
An index that selects the retained features from a feature vector. If
indices
is False, this is a boolean array of shape [# input features], in which an element is True iff its corresponding feature is selected for retention. Ifindices
is True, this is an integer array of shape [# output features] whose values are indices into the input feature vector.
- inverse_transform(X)[source]¶
Reverse the transformation operation.
- Parameters:
- Xarray of shape [n_samples, n_selected_features]
The input samples.
- Returns:
- X_rarray of shape [n_samples, n_original_features]
X
with columns of zeros inserted where features would have been removed bytransform
.
- set_output(*, transform=None)[source]¶
Set output container.
See Introducing the set_output API for an example on how to use the API.
- Parameters:
- transform{“default”, “pandas”}, default=None
Configure output of
transform
andfit_transform
."default"
: Default output format of a transformer"pandas"
: DataFrame outputNone
: Transform configuration is unchanged
- Returns:
- selfestimator instance
Estimator instance.
- set_params(**params)[source]¶
Set the parameters of this estimator.
The method works on simple estimators as well as on nested objects (such as
Pipeline
). The latter have parameters of the form<component>__<parameter>
so that it’s possible to update each component of a nested object.- Parameters:
- **paramsdict
Estimator parameters.
- Returns:
- selfestimator instance
Estimator instance.
Examples using sklearn.feature_selection.SequentialFeatureSelector
¶
Release Highlights for scikit-learn 0.24
Model-based and sequential feature selection