Mlpy

mlpy
Developer(s) Lead Developer: Davide Albanese; Contributors: Giuseppe Jurman, Stefano Merler, Roberto Visintainer, Marco Chierici
Stable release
3.5.0 / 12 March 2012 (2012-03-12)
Written in Python, C and C++
Operating system Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, Windows
Type Machine learning
License GPL
Website mlpy.fbk.eu

mlpy is a Python, open source, machine learning library built on top of NumPy/SciPy, the GNU Scientific Library and it makes an extensive use of the Cython language. mlpy provides a wide range of state-of-the-art machine learning methods for supervised and unsupervised problems and it is aimed at finding a reasonable compromise among modularity, maintainability, reproducibility, usability and efficiency. mlpy is multiplatform, it works with Python 2 and 3 and it is distributed under GPL3.

Suited for general-purpose machine learning tasks,[1][2][3][4] mlpy's motivating application field is bioinformatics, i.e. the analysis of high throughput omics data.[5]

Features

Kernel-based functions are managed through a common kernel layer. In particular, the user can choose between supplying the data or a precomputed kernel in input space. Linear, polynomial, Gaussian, exponential and sigmoid kernels are available as default choices, and custom kernels can be defined as well. Many classification and regression algorithms are endowed with an internal feature ranking procedure: in alternative, mlpy implements the I-Relief algorithm. Recursive feature elimination (RFE) for linear classifiers and the KFDA-RFE algorithm are available for feature selection. Methods for feature list analysis (for example the Canberra stability indicator[6]), data resampling and error evaluation are provided, together with different clustering analysis methods (Hierarchical, Memory-saving Hierarchical, k-means). Finally, dedicated submodules are included for longitudinal data analysis through wavelet transform (Continuous, Discrete and Undecimated) and dynamic programming algorithms (Dynamic Time Warping and variants).

See also

References

  1. Soleymani et al (2011). Continuous emotion detection in response to music videos. IEEE International Conference on Automatic Face & Gesture Recognition and Workshops 2011.
  2. Megies, T. et al (2011). ObsPy – What can it do for data centers and observatories? Annals of Geophysics, 2011.
  3. Nguyen, M. H (2010). Nguyen et al. Optimal feature selection for support vector machines. Pattern Recognition, 2010.
  4. Santana R. (2011) R. Santana. Estimation of distribution algorithms: from available implementations to potential developments. Proceedings of the 13th annual conference companion on Genetic and evolutionary computation, 2011.
  5. Wuchty S. (2010). Gene pathways and subnetworks distinguish between major glioma subtypes and elucidate potential underlying biology. Journal of Biomedical Informatics, 2010
  6. Jurman, Giuseppe; Merler, Stefano; Barla, Annalisa; Paoli, Silvano; Galea, Antonio; Furlanello, Cesare (2008). "Algebraic stability indicators for ranked lists in molecular profiling". Bioinformatics. 24 (2): 258–264. PMID 18024475. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btm550. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
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