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Plot confusion matrix sklearn with multiple labels

I am plotting a confusion matrix for a multiple labelled data, where labels look like:

label1: 1, 0, 0, 0

label2: 0, 1, 0, 0

label3: 0, 0, 1, 0

label4: 0, 0, 0, 1

I am able to classify successfully using the below code. I only need some help to plot confusion matrix.

    for i in range(4):
        y_train= y[:,i]
        print('Train subject %d, class %s' % (subject, cols[i]))
        lr.fit(X_train[::sample,:],y_train[::sample])
        pred[:,i] = lr.predict_proba(X_test)[:,1]

I used the following code to print confusion matrix, but it always return a 2X2 matrix

prediction = lr.predict(X_train)

print(confusion_matrix(y_train, prediction))
like image 396
tourist Avatar asked Aug 19 '16 07:08

tourist


2 Answers

I found a function that can plot the confusion matrix which generated from sklearn.

import numpy as np


def plot_confusion_matrix(cm,
                          target_names,
                          title='Confusion matrix',
                          cmap=None,
                          normalize=True):
    """
    given a sklearn confusion matrix (cm), make a nice plot

    Arguments
    ---------
    cm:           confusion matrix from sklearn.metrics.confusion_matrix

    target_names: given classification classes such as [0, 1, 2]
                  the class names, for example: ['high', 'medium', 'low']

    title:        the text to display at the top of the matrix

    cmap:         the gradient of the values displayed from matplotlib.pyplot.cm
                  see http://matplotlib.org/examples/color/colormaps_reference.html
                  plt.get_cmap('jet') or plt.cm.Blues

    normalize:    If False, plot the raw numbers
                  If True, plot the proportions

    Usage
    -----
    plot_confusion_matrix(cm           = cm,                  # confusion matrix created by
                                                              # sklearn.metrics.confusion_matrix
                          normalize    = True,                # show proportions
                          target_names = y_labels_vals,       # list of names of the classes
                          title        = best_estimator_name) # title of graph

    Citiation
    ---------
    http://scikit-learn.org/stable/auto_examples/model_selection/plot_confusion_matrix.html

    """
    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    import numpy as np
    import itertools

    accuracy = np.trace(cm) / float(np.sum(cm))
    misclass = 1 - accuracy

    if cmap is None:
        cmap = plt.get_cmap('Blues')

    plt.figure(figsize=(8, 6))
    plt.imshow(cm, interpolation='nearest', cmap=cmap)
    plt.title(title)
    plt.colorbar()

    if target_names is not None:
        tick_marks = np.arange(len(target_names))
        plt.xticks(tick_marks, target_names, rotation=45)
        plt.yticks(tick_marks, target_names)

    if normalize:
        cm = cm.astype('float') / cm.sum(axis=1)[:, np.newaxis]


    thresh = cm.max() / 1.5 if normalize else cm.max() / 2
    for i, j in itertools.product(range(cm.shape[0]), range(cm.shape[1])):
        if normalize:
            plt.text(j, i, "{:0.4f}".format(cm[i, j]),
                     horizontalalignment="center",
                     color="white" if cm[i, j] > thresh else "black")
        else:
            plt.text(j, i, "{:,}".format(cm[i, j]),
                     horizontalalignment="center",
                     color="white" if cm[i, j] > thresh else "black")


    plt.tight_layout()
    plt.ylabel('True label')
    plt.xlabel('Predicted label\naccuracy={:0.4f}; misclass={:0.4f}'.format(accuracy, misclass))
    plt.show()

It will look like this enter image description here

like image 177
Calvin Duy Canh Tran Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 20:09

Calvin Duy Canh Tran


This works the best for me :

from sklearn.metrics import multilabel_confusion_matrix
y_unique = y_test.unique()
mcm = multilabel_confusion_matrix(y_test, y_pred, labels = y_unique)
mcm
like image 23
AAKANKSHA DUGGAL Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 20:09

AAKANKSHA DUGGAL