GradientBoostingRegressor#

class sklearn.ensemble.GradientBoostingRegressor(*, loss='squared_error', learning_rate=0.1, n_estimators=100, subsample=1.0, criterion='friedman_mse', min_samples_split=2, min_samples_leaf=1, min_weight_fraction_leaf=0.0, max_depth=3, min_impurity_decrease=0.0, init=None, random_state=None, max_features=None, alpha=0.9, verbose=0, max_leaf_nodes=None, warm_start=False, validation_fraction=0.1, n_iter_no_change=None, tol=0.0001, ccp_alpha=0.0)[source]#

Gradient Boosting for regression.

This estimator builds an additive model in a forward stage-wise fashion; it allows for the optimization of arbitrary differentiable loss functions. In each stage a regression tree is fit on the negative gradient of the given loss function.

HistGradientBoostingRegressor is a much faster variant of this algorithm for intermediate and large datasets (n_samples >= 10_000) and supports monotonic constraints.

Read more in the User Guide.

Parameters:
loss{‘squared_error’, ‘absolute_error’, ‘huber’, ‘quantile’}, default=’squared_error’

Loss function to be optimized. ‘squared_error’ refers to the squared error for regression. ‘absolute_error’ refers to the absolute error of regression and is a robust loss function. ‘huber’ is a combination of the two. ‘quantile’ allows quantile regression (use alpha to specify the quantile).

learning_ratefloat, default=0.1

Learning rate shrinks the contribution of each tree by learning_rate. There is a trade-off between learning_rate and n_estimators. Values must be in the range [0.0, inf).

n_estimatorsint, default=100

The number of boosting stages to perform. Gradient boosting is fairly robust to over-fitting so a large number usually results in better performance. Values must be in the range [1, inf).

subsamplefloat, default=1.0

The fraction of samples to be used for fitting the individual base learners. If smaller than 1.0 this results in Stochastic Gradient Boosting. subsample interacts with the parameter n_estimators. Choosing subsample < 1.0 leads to a reduction of variance and an increase in bias. Values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0].

criterion{‘friedman_mse’, ‘squared_error’}, default=’friedman_mse’

The function to measure the quality of a split. Supported criteria are “friedman_mse” for the mean squared error with improvement score by Friedman, “squared_error” for mean squared error. The default value of “friedman_mse” is generally the best as it can provide a better approximation in some cases.

Added in version 0.18.

min_samples_splitint or float, default=2

The minimum number of samples required to split an internal node:

  • If int, values must be in the range [2, inf).

  • If float, values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0] and min_samples_split will be ceil(min_samples_split * n_samples).

Changed in version 0.18: Added float values for fractions.

min_samples_leafint or float, default=1

The minimum number of samples required to be at a leaf node. A split point at any depth will only be considered if it leaves at least min_samples_leaf training samples in each of the left and right branches. This may have the effect of smoothing the model, especially in regression.

  • If int, values must be in the range [1, inf).

  • If float, values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0) and min_samples_leaf will be ceil(min_samples_leaf * n_samples).

Changed in version 0.18: Added float values for fractions.

min_weight_fraction_leaffloat, default=0.0

The minimum weighted fraction of the sum total of weights (of all the input samples) required to be at a leaf node. Samples have equal weight when sample_weight is not provided. Values must be in the range [0.0, 0.5].

max_depthint or None, default=3

Maximum depth of the individual regression estimators. The maximum depth limits the number of nodes in the tree. Tune this parameter for best performance; the best value depends on the interaction of the input variables. If None, then nodes are expanded until all leaves are pure or until all leaves contain less than min_samples_split samples. If int, values must be in the range [1, inf).

min_impurity_decreasefloat, default=0.0

A node will be split if this split induces a decrease of the impurity greater than or equal to this value. Values must be in the range [0.0, inf).

The weighted impurity decrease equation is the following:

N_t / N * (impurity - N_t_R / N_t * right_impurity
                    - N_t_L / N_t * left_impurity)

where N is the total number of samples, N_t is the number of samples at the current node, N_t_L is the number of samples in the left child, and N_t_R is the number of samples in the right child.

N, N_t, N_t_R and N_t_L all refer to the weighted sum, if sample_weight is passed.

Added in version 0.19.

initestimator or ‘zero’, default=None

An estimator object that is used to compute the initial predictions. init has to provide fit and predict. If ‘zero’, the initial raw predictions are set to zero. By default a DummyEstimator is used, predicting either the average target value (for loss=’squared_error’), or a quantile for the other losses.

random_stateint, RandomState instance or None, default=None

Controls the random seed given to each Tree estimator at each boosting iteration. In addition, it controls the random permutation of the features at each split (see Notes for more details). It also controls the random splitting of the training data to obtain a validation set if n_iter_no_change is not None. Pass an int for reproducible output across multiple function calls. See Glossary.

max_features{‘sqrt’, ‘log2’}, int or float, default=None

The number of features to consider when looking for the best split:

  • If int, values must be in the range [1, inf).

  • If float, values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0] and the features considered at each split will be max(1, int(max_features * n_features_in_)).

  • If “sqrt”, then max_features=sqrt(n_features).

  • If “log2”, then max_features=log2(n_features).

  • If None, then max_features=n_features.

Choosing max_features < n_features leads to a reduction of variance and an increase in bias.

Note: the search for a split does not stop until at least one valid partition of the node samples is found, even if it requires to effectively inspect more than max_features features.

alphafloat, default=0.9

The alpha-quantile of the huber loss function and the quantile loss function. Only if loss='huber' or loss='quantile'. Values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0).

verboseint, default=0

Enable verbose output. If 1 then it prints progress and performance once in a while (the more trees the lower the frequency). If greater than 1 then it prints progress and performance for every tree. Values must be in the range [0, inf).

max_leaf_nodesint, default=None

Grow trees with max_leaf_nodes in best-first fashion. Best nodes are defined as relative reduction in impurity. Values must be in the range [2, inf). If None, then unlimited number of leaf nodes.

warm_startbool, default=False

When set to True, reuse the solution of the previous call to fit and add more estimators to the ensemble, otherwise, just erase the previous solution. See the Glossary.

validation_fractionfloat, default=0.1

The proportion of training data to set aside as validation set for early stopping. Values must be in the range (0.0, 1.0). Only used if n_iter_no_change is set to an integer.

Added in version 0.20.

n_iter_no_changeint, default=None

n_iter_no_change is used to decide if early stopping will be used to terminate training when validation score is not improving. By default it is set to None to disable early stopping. If set to a number, it will set aside validation_fraction size of the training data as validation and terminate training when validation score is not improving in all of the previous n_iter_no_change numbers of iterations. Values must be in the range [1, inf). See Early stopping in Gradient Boosting.

Added in version 0.20.

tolfloat, default=1e-4

Tolerance for the early stopping. When the loss is not improving by at least tol for n_iter_no_change iterations (if set to a number), the training stops. Values must be in the range [0.0, inf).

Added in version 0.20.

ccp_alphanon-negative float, default=0.0

Complexity parameter used for Minimal Cost-Complexity Pruning. The subtree with the largest cost complexity that is smaller than ccp_alpha will be chosen. By default, no pruning is performed. Values must be in the range [0.0, inf). See Minimal Cost-Complexity Pruning for details.

Added in version 0.22.

Attributes:
n_estimators_int

The number of estimators as selected by early stopping (if n_iter_no_change is specified). Otherwise it is set to n_estimators.

n_trees_per_iteration_int

The number of trees that are built at each iteration. For regressors, this is always 1.

Added in version 1.4.0.

feature_importances_ndarray of shape (n_features,)

The impurity-based feature importances.

oob_improvement_ndarray of shape (n_estimators,)

The improvement in loss on the out-of-bag samples relative to the previous iteration. oob_improvement_[0] is the improvement in loss of the first stage over the init estimator. Only available if subsample < 1.0.

oob_scores_ndarray of shape (n_estimators,)

The full history of the loss values on the out-of-bag samples. Only available if subsample < 1.0.

Added in version 1.3.

oob_score_float

The last value of the loss on the out-of-bag samples. It is the same as oob_scores_[-1]. Only available if subsample < 1.0.

Added in version 1.3.

train_score_ndarray of shape (n_estimators,)

The i-th score train_score_[i] is the loss of the model at iteration i on the in-bag sample. If subsample == 1 this is the loss on the training data.

init_estimator

The estimator that provides the initial predictions. Set via the init argument.

estimators_ndarray of DecisionTreeRegressor of shape (n_estimators, 1)

The collection of fitted sub-estimators.

n_features_in_int

Number of features seen during fit.

Added in version 0.24.

feature_names_in_ndarray of shape (n_features_in_,)

Names of features seen during fit. Defined only when X has feature names that are all strings.

Added in version 1.0.

max_features_int

The inferred value of max_features.

See also

HistGradientBoostingRegressor

Histogram-based Gradient Boosting Classification Tree.

sklearn.tree.DecisionTreeRegressor

A decision tree regressor.

sklearn.ensemble.RandomForestRegressor

A random forest regressor.

Notes

The features are always randomly permuted at each split. Therefore, the best found split may vary, even with the same training data and max_features=n_features, if the improvement of the criterion is identical for several splits enumerated during the search of the best split. To obtain a deterministic behaviour during fitting, random_state has to be fixed.

References

J. Friedman, Greedy Function Approximation: A Gradient Boosting Machine, The Annals of Statistics, Vol. 29, No. 5, 2001.

  1. Friedman, Stochastic Gradient Boosting, 1999

T. Hastie, R. Tibshirani and J. Friedman. Elements of Statistical Learning Ed. 2, Springer, 2009.

Examples

>>> from sklearn.datasets import make_regression
>>> from sklearn.ensemble import GradientBoostingRegressor
>>> from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
>>> X, y = make_regression(random_state=0)
>>> X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(
...     X, y, random_state=0)
>>> reg = GradientBoostingRegressor(random_state=0)
>>> reg.fit(X_train, y_train)
GradientBoostingRegressor(random_state=0)
>>> reg.predict(X_test[1:2])
array([-61...])
>>> reg.score(X_test, y_test)
0.4...

For a detailed example of utilizing GradientBoostingRegressor to fit an ensemble of weak predictive models, please refer to Gradient Boosting regression.

apply(X)[source]#

Apply trees in the ensemble to X, return leaf indices.

Added in version 0.17.

Parameters:
X{array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)

The input samples. Internally, its dtype will be converted to dtype=np.float32. If a sparse matrix is provided, it will be converted to a sparse csr_matrix.

Returns:
X_leavesarray-like of shape (n_samples, n_estimators)

For each datapoint x in X and for each tree in the ensemble, return the index of the leaf x ends up in each estimator.

property feature_importances_#

The impurity-based feature importances.

The higher, the more important the feature. The importance of a feature is computed as the (normalized) total reduction of the criterion brought by that feature. It is also known as the Gini importance.

Warning: impurity-based feature importances can be misleading for high cardinality features (many unique values). See sklearn.inspection.permutation_importance as an alternative.

Returns:
feature_importances_ndarray of shape (n_features,)

The values of this array sum to 1, unless all trees are single node trees consisting of only the root node, in which case it will be an array of zeros.

fit(X, y, sample_weight=None, monitor=None)[source]#

Fit the gradient boosting model.

Parameters:
X{array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)

The input samples. Internally, it will be converted to dtype=np.float32 and if a sparse matrix is provided to a sparse csr_matrix.

yarray-like of shape (n_samples,)

Target values (strings or integers in classification, real numbers in regression) For classification, labels must correspond to classes.

sample_weightarray-like of shape (n_samples,), default=None

Sample weights. If None, then samples are equally weighted. Splits that would create child nodes with net zero or negative weight are ignored while searching for a split in each node. In the case of classification, splits are also ignored if they would result in any single class carrying a negative weight in either child node.

monitorcallable, default=None

The monitor is called after each iteration with the current iteration, a reference to the estimator and the local variables of _fit_stages as keyword arguments callable(i, self, locals()). If the callable returns True the fitting procedure is stopped. The monitor can be used for various things such as computing held-out estimates, early stopping, model introspect, and snapshotting.

Returns:
selfobject

Fitted estimator.

get_metadata_routing()[source]#

Get metadata routing of this object.

Please check User Guide on how the routing mechanism works.

Returns:
routingMetadataRequest

A MetadataRequest encapsulating routing information.

get_params(deep=True)[source]#

Get parameters for this estimator.

Parameters:
deepbool, default=True

If True, will return the parameters for this estimator and contained subobjects that are estimators.

Returns:
paramsdict

Parameter names mapped to their values.

predict(X)[source]#

Predict regression target for X.

Parameters:
X{array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)

The input samples. Internally, it will be converted to dtype=np.float32 and if a sparse matrix is provided to a sparse csr_matrix.

Returns:
yndarray of shape (n_samples,)

The predicted values.

score(X, y, sample_weight=None)[source]#

Return the coefficient of determination of the prediction.

The coefficient of determination \(R^2\) is defined as \((1 - \frac{u}{v})\), where \(u\) is the residual sum of squares ((y_true - y_pred)** 2).sum() and \(v\) is the total sum of squares ((y_true - y_true.mean()) ** 2).sum(). The best possible score is 1.0 and it can be negative (because the model can be arbitrarily worse). A constant model that always predicts the expected value of y, disregarding the input features, would get a \(R^2\) score of 0.0.

Parameters:
Xarray-like of shape (n_samples, n_features)

Test samples. For some estimators this may be a precomputed kernel matrix or a list of generic objects instead with shape (n_samples, n_samples_fitted), where n_samples_fitted is the number of samples used in the fitting for the estimator.

yarray-like of shape (n_samples,) or (n_samples, n_outputs)

True values for X.

sample_weightarray-like of shape (n_samples,), default=None

Sample weights.

Returns:
scorefloat

\(R^2\) of self.predict(X) w.r.t. y.

Notes

The \(R^2\) score used when calling score on a regressor uses multioutput='uniform_average' from version 0.23 to keep consistent with default value of r2_score. This influences the score method of all the multioutput regressors (except for MultiOutputRegressor).

set_fit_request(*, monitor: bool | None | str = '$UNCHANGED$', sample_weight: bool | None | str = '$UNCHANGED$') GradientBoostingRegressor[source]#

Request metadata passed to the fit method.

Note that this method is only relevant if enable_metadata_routing=True (see sklearn.set_config). Please see User Guide on how the routing mechanism works.

The options for each parameter are:

  • True: metadata is requested, and passed to fit if provided. The request is ignored if metadata is not provided.

  • False: metadata is not requested and the meta-estimator will not pass it to fit.

  • None: metadata is not requested, and the meta-estimator will raise an error if the user provides it.

  • str: metadata should be passed to the meta-estimator with this given alias instead of the original name.

The default (sklearn.utils.metadata_routing.UNCHANGED) retains the existing request. This allows you to change the request for some parameters and not others.

Added in version 1.3.

Note

This method is only relevant if this estimator is used as a sub-estimator of a meta-estimator, e.g. used inside a Pipeline. Otherwise it has no effect.

Parameters:
monitorstr, True, False, or None, default=sklearn.utils.metadata_routing.UNCHANGED

Metadata routing for monitor parameter in fit.

sample_weightstr, True, False, or None, default=sklearn.utils.metadata_routing.UNCHANGED

Metadata routing for sample_weight parameter in fit.

Returns:
selfobject

The updated object.

set_params(**params)[source]#

Set the parameters of this estimator.

The method works on simple estimators as well as on nested objects (such as Pipeline). The latter have parameters of the form <component>__<parameter> so that it’s possible to update each component of a nested object.

Parameters:
**paramsdict

Estimator parameters.

Returns:
selfestimator instance

Estimator instance.

set_score_request(*, sample_weight: bool | None | str = '$UNCHANGED$') GradientBoostingRegressor[source]#

Request metadata passed to the score method.

Note that this method is only relevant if enable_metadata_routing=True (see sklearn.set_config). Please see User Guide on how the routing mechanism works.

The options for each parameter are:

  • True: metadata is requested, and passed to score if provided. The request is ignored if metadata is not provided.

  • False: metadata is not requested and the meta-estimator will not pass it to score.

  • None: metadata is not requested, and the meta-estimator will raise an error if the user provides it.

  • str: metadata should be passed to the meta-estimator with this given alias instead of the original name.

The default (sklearn.utils.metadata_routing.UNCHANGED) retains the existing request. This allows you to change the request for some parameters and not others.

Added in version 1.3.

Note

This method is only relevant if this estimator is used as a sub-estimator of a meta-estimator, e.g. used inside a Pipeline. Otherwise it has no effect.

Parameters:
sample_weightstr, True, False, or None, default=sklearn.utils.metadata_routing.UNCHANGED

Metadata routing for sample_weight parameter in score.

Returns:
selfobject

The updated object.

staged_predict(X)[source]#

Predict regression target at each stage for X.

This method allows monitoring (i.e. determine error on testing set) after each stage.

Parameters:
X{array-like, sparse matrix} of shape (n_samples, n_features)

The input samples. Internally, it will be converted to dtype=np.float32 and if a sparse matrix is provided to a sparse csr_matrix.

Yields:
ygenerator of ndarray of shape (n_samples,)

The predicted value of the input samples.