sklearn.preprocessing
.StandardScaler¶
-
class
sklearn.preprocessing.
StandardScaler
(copy=True, with_mean=True, with_std=True)[source]¶ Standardize features by removing the mean and scaling to unit variance
The standard score of a sample
x
is calculated as:z = (x - u) / s
where
u
is the mean of the training samples or zero ifwith_mean=False
, ands
is the standard deviation of the training samples or one ifwith_std=False
.Centering and scaling happen independently on each feature by computing the relevant statistics on the samples in the training set. Mean and standard deviation are then stored to be used on later data using
transform
.Standardization of a dataset is a common requirement for many machine learning estimators: they might behave badly if the individual features do not more or less look like standard normally distributed data (e.g. Gaussian with 0 mean and unit variance).
For instance many elements used in the objective function of a learning algorithm (such as the RBF kernel of Support Vector Machines or the L1 and L2 regularizers of linear models) assume that all features are centered around 0 and have variance in the same order. If a feature has a variance that is orders of magnitude larger that others, it might dominate the objective function and make the estimator unable to learn from other features correctly as expected.
This scaler can also be applied to sparse CSR or CSC matrices by passing
with_mean=False
to avoid breaking the sparsity structure of the data.Read more in the User Guide.
- Parameters
- copyboolean, optional, default True
If False, try to avoid a copy and do inplace scaling instead. This is not guaranteed to always work inplace; e.g. if the data is not a NumPy array or scipy.sparse CSR matrix, a copy may still be returned.
- with_meanboolean, True by default
If True, center the data before scaling. This does not work (and will raise an exception) when attempted on sparse matrices, because centering them entails building a dense matrix which in common use cases is likely to be too large to fit in memory.
- with_stdboolean, True by default
If True, scale the data to unit variance (or equivalently, unit standard deviation).
- Attributes
- scale_ndarray or None, shape (n_features,)
Per feature relative scaling of the data. This is calculated using
np.sqrt(var_)
. Equal toNone
whenwith_std=False
.New in version 0.17: scale_
- mean_ndarray or None, shape (n_features,)
The mean value for each feature in the training set. Equal to
None
whenwith_mean=False
.- var_ndarray or None, shape (n_features,)
The variance for each feature in the training set. Used to compute
scale_
. Equal toNone
whenwith_std=False
.- n_samples_seen_int or array, shape (n_features,)
The number of samples processed by the estimator for each feature. If there are not missing samples, the
n_samples_seen
will be an integer, otherwise it will be an array. Will be reset on new calls to fit, but increments acrosspartial_fit
calls.
See also
scale
Equivalent function without the estimator API.
sklearn.decomposition.PCA
Further removes the linear correlation across features with ‘whiten=True’.
Notes
NaNs are treated as missing values: disregarded in fit, and maintained in transform.
We use a biased estimator for the standard deviation, equivalent to
numpy.std(x, ddof=0)
. Note that the choice ofddof
is unlikely to affect model performance.For a comparison of the different scalers, transformers, and normalizers, see examples/preprocessing/plot_all_scaling.py.
Examples
>>> from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler >>> data = [[0, 0], [0, 0], [1, 1], [1, 1]] >>> scaler = StandardScaler() >>> print(scaler.fit(data)) StandardScaler() >>> print(scaler.mean_) [0.5 0.5] >>> print(scaler.transform(data)) [[-1. -1.] [-1. -1.] [ 1. 1.] [ 1. 1.]] >>> print(scaler.transform([[2, 2]])) [[3. 3.]]
Methods
fit
(self, X[, y])Compute the mean and std to be used for later scaling.
fit_transform
(self, X[, y])Fit to data, then transform it.
get_params
(self[, deep])Get parameters for this estimator.
inverse_transform
(self, X[, copy])Scale back the data to the original representation
partial_fit
(self, X[, y])Online computation of mean and std on X for later scaling.
set_params
(self, \*\*params)Set the parameters of this estimator.
transform
(self, X[, copy])Perform standardization by centering and scaling
-
__init__
(self, copy=True, with_mean=True, with_std=True)[source]¶ Initialize self. See help(type(self)) for accurate signature.
-
fit
(self, X, y=None)[source]¶ Compute the mean and std to be used for later scaling.
- Parameters
- X{array-like, sparse matrix}, shape [n_samples, n_features]
The data used to compute the mean and standard deviation used for later scaling along the features axis.
- y
Ignored
-
fit_transform
(self, X, y=None, **fit_params)[source]¶ Fit to data, then transform it.
Fits transformer to X and y with optional parameters fit_params and returns a transformed version of X.
- Parameters
- Xnumpy array of shape [n_samples, n_features]
Training set.
- ynumpy array of shape [n_samples]
Target values.
- Returns
- X_newnumpy array of shape [n_samples, n_features_new]
Transformed array.
-
get_params
(self, deep=True)[source]¶ Get parameters for this estimator.
- Parameters
- deepboolean, optional
If True, will return the parameters for this estimator and contained subobjects that are estimators.
- Returns
- paramsmapping of string to any
Parameter names mapped to their values.
-
inverse_transform
(self, X, copy=None)[source]¶ Scale back the data to the original representation
- Parameters
- Xarray-like, shape [n_samples, n_features]
The data used to scale along the features axis.
- copybool, optional (default: None)
Copy the input X or not.
- Returns
- X_trarray-like, shape [n_samples, n_features]
Transformed array.
-
partial_fit
(self, X, y=None)[source]¶ Online computation of mean and std on X for later scaling. All of X is processed as a single batch. This is intended for cases when
fit
is not feasible due to very large number ofn_samples
or because X is read from a continuous stream.The algorithm for incremental mean and std is given in Equation 1.5a,b in Chan, Tony F., Gene H. Golub, and Randall J. LeVeque. “Algorithms for computing the sample variance: Analysis and recommendations.” The American Statistician 37.3 (1983): 242-247:
- Parameters
- X{array-like, sparse matrix}, shape [n_samples, n_features]
The data used to compute the mean and standard deviation used for later scaling along the features axis.
- y
Ignored
-
set_params
(self, **params)[source]¶ Set the parameters of this estimator.
The method works on simple estimators as well as on nested objects (such as pipelines). The latter have parameters of the form
<component>__<parameter>
so that it’s possible to update each component of a nested object.- Returns
- self