# Code source: Jaques Grobler # License: BSD 3 clause import matplotlib.pyplot as plt import numpy as np from sklearn import datasets, linear_model from sklearn.metrics import mean_squared_error, r2_score # Load the diabetes dataset diabetes_X, diabetes_y = datasets.load_diabetes(return_X_y=True) # Use only one feature diabetes_X = diabetes_X[:, np.newaxis, 2] # Split the data into training/testing sets diabetes_X_train = diabetes_X[:-20] diabetes_X_test = diabetes_X[-20:] # Split the targets into training/testing sets diabetes_y_train = diabetes_y[:-20] diabetes_y_test = diabetes_y[-20:] # Create linear regression object regr = linear_model.LinearRegression() # Train the model using the training sets regr.fit(diabetes_X_train, diabetes_y_train) # Make predictions using the testing set diabetes_y_pred = regr.predict(diabetes_X_test) # The coefficients print("Coefficients: \n", regr.coef_) # The mean squared error print("Mean squared error: %.2f" % mean_squared_error(diabetes_y_test, diabetes_y_pred)) # The coefficient of determination: 1 is perfect prediction print("Coefficient of determination: %.2f" % r2_score(diabetes_y_test, diabetes_y_pred)) # Plot outputs plt.scatter(diabetes_X_test, diabetes_y_test, color="black") plt.plot(diabetes_X_test, diabetes_y_pred, color="blue", linewidth=3) plt.xticks(()) plt.yticks(()) plt.show()