Plot different SVM classifiers in the iris dataset#

Comparison of different linear SVM classifiers on a 2D projection of the iris dataset. We only consider the first 2 features of this dataset:

  • Sepal length

  • Sepal width

This example shows how to plot the decision surface for four SVM classifiers with different kernels.

The linear models LinearSVC() and SVC(kernel='linear') yield slightly different decision boundaries. This can be a consequence of the following differences:

  • LinearSVC minimizes the squared hinge loss while SVC minimizes the regular hinge loss.

  • LinearSVC uses the One-vs-All (also known as One-vs-Rest) multiclass reduction while SVC uses the One-vs-One multiclass reduction.

Both linear models have linear decision boundaries (intersecting hyperplanes) while the non-linear kernel models (polynomial or Gaussian RBF) have more flexible non-linear decision boundaries with shapes that depend on the kind of kernel and its parameters.

Note

while plotting the decision function of classifiers for toy 2D datasets can help get an intuitive understanding of their respective expressive power, be aware that those intuitions don’t always generalize to more realistic high-dimensional problems.

SVC with linear kernel, LinearSVC (linear kernel), SVC with RBF kernel, SVC with polynomial (degree 3) kernel
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

from sklearn import datasets, svm
from sklearn.inspection import DecisionBoundaryDisplay

# import some data to play with
iris = datasets.load_iris()
# Take the first two features. We could avoid this by using a two-dim dataset
X = iris.data[:, :2]
y = iris.target

# we create an instance of SVM and fit out data. We do not scale our
# data since we want to plot the support vectors
C = 1.0  # SVM regularization parameter
models = (
    svm.SVC(kernel="linear", C=C),
    svm.LinearSVC(C=C, max_iter=10000),
    svm.SVC(kernel="rbf", gamma=0.7, C=C),
    svm.SVC(kernel="poly", degree=3, gamma="auto", C=C),
)
models = (clf.fit(X, y) for clf in models)

# title for the plots
titles = (
    "SVC with linear kernel",
    "LinearSVC (linear kernel)",
    "SVC with RBF kernel",
    "SVC with polynomial (degree 3) kernel",
)

# Set-up 2x2 grid for plotting.
fig, sub = plt.subplots(2, 2)
plt.subplots_adjust(wspace=0.4, hspace=0.4)

X0, X1 = X[:, 0], X[:, 1]

for clf, title, ax in zip(models, titles, sub.flatten()):
    disp = DecisionBoundaryDisplay.from_estimator(
        clf,
        X,
        response_method="predict",
        cmap=plt.cm.coolwarm,
        alpha=0.8,
        ax=ax,
        xlabel=iris.feature_names[0],
        ylabel=iris.feature_names[1],
    )
    ax.scatter(X0, X1, c=y, cmap=plt.cm.coolwarm, s=20, edgecolors="k")
    ax.set_xticks(())
    ax.set_yticks(())
    ax.set_title(title)

plt.show()

Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 0.193 seconds)

Related examples

SVM with custom kernel

SVM with custom kernel

Decision boundary of semi-supervised classifiers versus SVM on the Iris dataset

Decision boundary of semi-supervised classifiers versus SVM on the Iris dataset

Plot the support vectors in LinearSVC

Plot the support vectors in LinearSVC

Plot the decision surface of decision trees trained on the iris dataset

Plot the decision surface of decision trees trained on the iris dataset

Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery