In [2]:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

from sklearn import svm, datasets
from sklearn.cross_validation import train_test_split
from sklearn.metrics import confusion_matrix

%matplotlib inline

# import some data to play with
iris = datasets.load_iris()
X = iris.data
y = iris.target

# Split the data into a training set and a test set
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y, random_state=0)

# Run classifier, using a model that is too regularized (C too low) to see
# the impact on the results
classifier = svm.SVC(kernel='linear', C=0.01)
y_pred = classifier.fit(X_train, y_train).predict(X_test)


def plot_confusion_matrix(cm, title='Confusion matrix', cmap=plt.cm.Blues):
    plt.imshow(cm, interpolation='nearest', cmap=cmap)
    plt.title(title)
    plt.colorbar()
    tick_marks = np.arange(len(iris.target_names))
    plt.xticks(tick_marks, iris.target_names, rotation=45)
    plt.yticks(tick_marks, iris.target_names)
    plt.tight_layout()
    plt.ylabel('True label')
    plt.xlabel('Predicted label')


# Compute confusion matrix
cm = confusion_matrix(y_test, y_pred)
np.set_printoptions(precision=2)
print('Confusion matrix, without normalization')
print(cm)
plt.figure()
plot_confusion_matrix(cm)

# Normalize the confusion matrix by row (i.e by the number of samples
# in each class)
cm_normalized = cm.astype('float') / cm.sum(axis=1)[:, np.newaxis]
print('Normalized confusion matrix')
print(cm_normalized)
plt.figure()
plot_confusion_matrix(cm_normalized, title='Normalized confusion matrix')

plt.show()


Confusion matrix, without normalization
[[13  0  0]
 [ 0 10  6]
 [ 0  0  9]]
Normalized confusion matrix
[[ 1.    0.    0.  ]
 [ 0.    0.62  0.38]
 [ 0.    0.    1.  ]]

In [ ]:
cmatrix =