I have already pre-cleaned the data, and below shows the format of the top 4 rows:
[IN] df.head()
[OUT] Year cleaned
0 1909 acquaint hous receiv follow letter clerk crown...
1 1909 ask secretari state war whether issu statement...
2 1909 i beg present petit sign upward motor car driv...
3 1909 i desir ask secretari state war second lieuten...
4 1909 ask secretari state war whether would introduc...
I have called train_test_split() as follows:
[IN] X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(df['cleaned'], df['Year'], random_state=2)
[Note*] `X_train` and `y_train` are now Pandas.core.series.Series of shape (1785,) and `X_test` and `y_test` are also Pandas.core.series.Series of shape (595,)
I have then vectorized the X training and testing data using the following TfidfVectorizer and fit/transform procedures:
[IN] v = TfidfVectorizer(decode_error='replace', encoding='utf-8', stop_words='english', ngram_range=(1, 1), sublinear_tf=True)
X_train = v.fit_transform(X_train)
X_test = v.transform(X_test)
I'm now at the stage where I would normally apply a classifier, etc (if this were a balanced set of data). However, I initialize imblearn's SMOTE() class (to perform over-sampling)...
[IN] smote_pipeline = make_pipeline_imb(SMOTE(), classifier(random_state=42))
smote_model = smote_pipeline.fit(X_train, y_train)
smote_prediction = smote_model.predict(X_test)
... but this results in:
[OUT] ValueError: "Expected n_neighbors <= n_samples, but n_samples = 5, n_neighbors = 6.
I've attempted to whittle down the number of n_neighbors but to no avail, any tips or advice would be much appreciated. Thanks for reading.
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EDIT:
The dataset/dataframe (df
) contains 2380 rows across two columns, as shown in df.head()
above. X_train
contains 1785 of these rows in the format of a list of strings (df['cleaned']
) and y_train
also contains 1785 rows in the format of strings (df['Year']
).
Post-vectorization using TfidfVectorizer()
: X_train
and X_test
are converted from pandas.core.series.Series
of shape '(1785,)' and '(595,)' respectively, to scipy.sparse.csr.csr_matrix
of shape '(1785, 126459)' and '(595, 126459)' respectively.
As for the number of classes: using Counter()
, I've calculated that there are 199 classes (Years), each instance of a class is attached to one element of aforementioned df['cleaned']
data which contains a list of strings extracted from a textual corpus.
The objective of this process is to automatically determine/guess the year, decade or century (any degree of classification will do!) of input textual data based on vocabularly present.
Try to do the below code for SMOTE
oversampler=SMOTE(kind='regular',k_neighbors=2)
This worked for me.
I think that's possible to use the code:
Since there are approximately 200 classes and 1800 samples in the training set, you have on average 9 samples per class. The reason for the error message is that a) probably the data are not perfectly balanced and there are classes with less than 6 samples and b) the number of neighbors is 6. A few solutions for your problem:
Calculate the minimum number of samples (n_samples) among the 199 classes and select
n_neighbors
parameter of SMOTE class less or equal to n_samples.Exclude from oversampling the classes with n_samples < n_neighbors using the
ratio
parameter ofSMOTE
class.Use
RandomOverSampler
class which does not have a similar restriction.Combine 3 and 4 solutions: Create a pipeline that is using
SMOTE
andRandomOversampler
in a way that satisfies the condition n_neighbors <= n_samples for smoted classes and uses random oversampling when the condition is not satisfied.