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Ensemble Machine Learning in Python: Random Forest, AdaBoost

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  • 22,212 Students
  • Updated 1/2026
4.7
(2,651 Ratings)
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Course Information

Registration period
Year-round Recruitment
Course Level
Study Mode
Duration
5 Hour(s) 47 Minute(s)
Language
English
Taught by
Lazy Programmer Team, Lazy Programmer Inc.
Rating
4.7
(2,651 Ratings)
2 views

Course Overview

Ensemble Machine Learning in Python: Random Forest, AdaBoost

Ensemble Methods: Boosting, Bagging, Boostrap, and Statistical Machine Learning for Data Science in Python

In recent years, we've seen a resurgence in AI, or artificial intelligence, and machine learning.

Machine learning has led to some amazing results, like being able to analyze medical images and predict diseases on-par with human experts.

Google's AlphaGo program was able to beat a world champion in the strategy game go using deep reinforcement learning.

Machine learning is even being used to program self driving cars, which is going to change the automotive industry forever. Imagine a world with drastically reduced car accidents, simply by removing the element of human error.

Google famously announced that they are now "machine learning first", and companies like NVIDIA and Amazon have followed suit, and this is what's going to drive innovation in the coming years.

Machine learning is embedded into all sorts of different products, and it's used in many industries, like finance, online advertising, medicine, and robotics.

It is a widely applicable tool that will benefit you no matter what industry you're in, and it will also open up a ton of career opportunities once you get good.

Machine learning also raises some philosophical questions. Are we building a machine that can think? What does it mean to be conscious? Will computers one day take over the world?

This course is all about ensemble methods.

We've already learned some classic machine learning models like k-nearest neighbor and decision tree. We've studied their limitations and drawbacks.

But what if we could combine these models to eliminate those limitations and produce a much more powerful classifier or regressor?

In this course you'll study ways to combine models like decision trees and logistic regression to build models that can reach much higher accuracies than the base models they are made of.

In particular, we will study the Random Forest and AdaBoost algorithms in detail.

To motivate our discussion, we will learn about an important topic in statistical learning, the bias-variance trade-off. We will then study the bootstrap technique and bagging as methods for reducing both bias and variance simultaneously.

We'll do plenty of experiments and use these algorithms on real datasets so you can see first-hand how powerful they are.

Since deep learning is so popular these days, we will study some interesting commonalities between random forests, AdaBoost, and deep learning neural networks.

All the materials for this course are FREE. You can download and install Python, Numpy, and Scipy with simple commands on Windows, Linux, or Mac.

This course focuses on "how to build and understand", not just "how to use". Anyone can learn to use an API in 15 minutes after reading some documentation. It's not about "remembering facts", it's about "seeing for yourself" via experimentation. It will teach you how to visualize what's happening in the model internally. If you want more than just a superficial look at machine learning models, this course is for you.


"If you can't implement it, you don't understand it"

  • Or as the great physicist Richard Feynman said: "What I cannot create, I do not understand".

  • My courses are the ONLY courses where you will learn how to implement machine learning algorithms from scratch

  • Other courses will teach you how to plug in your data into a library, but do you really need help with 3 lines of code?

  • After doing the same thing with 10 datasets, you realize you didn't learn 10 things. You learned 1 thing, and just repeated the same 3 lines of code 10 times...


Suggested Prerequisites:

  • Calculus (derivatives)

  • Probability

  • Object-oriented programming

  • Python coding: if/else, loops, lists, dicts, sets

  • Numpy coding: matrix and vector operations

  • Simple machine learning models like linear regression and decision trees


WHAT ORDER SHOULD I TAKE YOUR COURSES IN?:

  • Check out the lecture "Machine Learning and AI Prerequisite Roadmap" (available in the FAQ of any of my courses, including the free Numpy course)


UNIQUE FEATURES

  • Every line of code explained in detail - email me any time if you disagree

  • No wasted time "typing" on the keyboard like other courses - let's be honest, nobody can really write code worth learning about in just 20 minutes from scratch

  • Not afraid of university-level math - get important details about algorithms that other courses leave out

Course Content

  • 10 section(s)
  • 45 lecture(s)
  • Section 1 Get Started
  • Section 2 Bias-Variance Trade-Off
  • Section 3 Bootstrap Estimates and Bagging
  • Section 4 Random Forest
  • Section 5 AdaBoost
  • Section 6 Background Review
  • Section 7 Appendix / FAQ Intro
  • Section 8 Setting Up Your Environment (FAQ by Student Request)
  • Section 9 Extra Help With Python Coding for Beginners (FAQ by Student Request)
  • Section 10 Effective Learning Strategies for Machine Learning (FAQ by Student Request)

What You’ll Learn

  • Understand and derive the bias-variance decomposition
  • Understand the bootstrap method and its application to bagging
  • Understand why bagging improves classification and regression performance
  • Understand and implement Random Forest
  • Understand and implement AdaBoost

Reviews

  • E
    Erik Stabij
    5.0

    This course was awesome! I learned a lot!

  • M
    Michael Lane
    2.0

    The course author is really arrogant and condescending

  • K
    Kiran Kura
    4.0

    Overall, a good course. The math is sometimes hard to follow, the way it is presented. Looking forward to an extension to this course.

  • J
    Joseph Puthumana
    3.5

    could include xgboost in this course. i find it hard to find really good material and tutorial for it in the internet

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