Thursday, September 28, 2023
HomeArtificial IntelligencePosit AI Weblog: Variational convnets with tfprobability

Posit AI Weblog: Variational convnets with tfprobability


A bit greater than a 12 months in the past, in his lovely visitor publish, Nick Strayer confirmed easy methods to classify a set of on a regular basis actions utilizing smartphone-recorded gyroscope and accelerometer information. Accuracy was superb, however Nick went on to examine classification outcomes extra carefully. Have been there actions extra liable to misclassification than others? And the way about these faulty outcomes: Did the community report them with equal, or much less confidence than people who have been right?

Technically, after we communicate of confidence in that method, we’re referring to the rating obtained for the “successful” class after softmax activation. If that successful rating is 0.9, we’d say “the community is bound that’s a gentoo penguin”; if it’s 0.2, we’d as a substitute conclude “to the community, neither choice appeared becoming, however cheetah appeared greatest.”

This use of “confidence” is convincing, but it surely has nothing to do with confidence – or credibility, or prediction, what have you ever – intervals. What we’d actually like to have the ability to do is put distributions over the community’s weights and make it Bayesian. Utilizing tfprobability’s variational Keras-compatible layers, that is one thing we truly can do.

Including uncertainty estimates to Keras fashions with tfprobability exhibits easy methods to use a variational dense layer to acquire estimates of epistemic uncertainty. On this publish, we modify the convnet utilized in Nick’s publish to be variational all through. Earlier than we begin, let’s rapidly summarize the duty.

The duty

To create the Smartphone-Based mostly Recognition of Human Actions and Postural Transitions Information Set (Reyes-Ortiz et al. 2016), the researchers had topics stroll, sit, stand, and transition from a type of actions to a different. In the meantime, two forms of smartphone sensors have been used to report movement information: Accelerometers measure linear acceleration in three dimensions, whereas gyroscopes are used to trace angular velocity across the coordinate axes. Listed below are the respective uncooked sensor information for six forms of actions from Nick’s authentic publish:

Identical to Nick, we’re going to zoom in on these six forms of exercise, and attempt to infer them from the sensor information. Some information wrangling is required to get the dataset right into a type we will work with; right here we’ll construct on Nick’s publish, and successfully begin from the info properly pre-processed and break up up into coaching and take a look at units:

Observations: 289
Variables: 6
$ experiment    <int> 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 2…
$ userId        <int> 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, 7, 7, 9, 9, 10, 10, 11…
$ exercise      <int> 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7…
$ information          <listing> [<data.frame[160 x 6]>, <information.body[206 x 6]>, <dat…
$ activityName  <fct> STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_S…
$ observationId <int> 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 2…
Observations: 69
Variables: 6
$ experiment    <int> 11, 12, 15, 16, 32, 33, 42, 43, 52, 53, 56, 57, 11, …
$ userId        <int> 6, 6, 8, 8, 16, 16, 21, 21, 26, 26, 28, 28, 6, 6, 8,…
$ exercise      <int> 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8…
$ information          <listing> [<data.frame[185 x 6]>, <information.body[151 x 6]>, <dat…
$ activityName  <fct> STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_SIT, STAND_TO_S…
$ observationId <int> 11, 12, 15, 16, 31, 32, 41, 42, 51, 52, 55, 56, 71, …

The code required to reach at this stage (copied from Nick’s publish) could also be discovered within the appendix on the backside of this web page.

Coaching pipeline

The dataset in query is sufficiently small to slot in reminiscence – however yours won’t be, so it may’t harm to see some streaming in motion. Apart from, it’s most likely protected to say that with TensorFlow 2.0, tfdatasets pipelines are the option to feed information to a mannequin.

As soon as the code listed within the appendix has run, the sensor information is to be present in trainData$information, a listing column containing information.bodys the place every row corresponds to some extent in time and every column holds one of many measurements. Nevertheless, not all time sequence (recordings) are of the identical size; we thus comply with the unique publish to pad all sequence to size pad_size (= 338). The anticipated form of coaching batches will then be (batch_size, pad_size, 6).

We initially create our coaching dataset:

train_x <- train_data$information %>% 
  map(as.matrix) %>%
  pad_sequences(maxlen = pad_size, dtype = "float32") %>%
  tensor_slices_dataset() 

train_y <- train_data$exercise %>% 
  one_hot_classes() %>% 
  tensor_slices_dataset()

train_dataset <- zip_datasets(train_x, train_y)
train_dataset
<ZipDataset shapes: ((338, 6), (6,)), varieties: (tf.float64, tf.float64)>

Then shuffle and batch it:

n_train <- nrow(train_data)
# the very best potential batch measurement for this dataset
# chosen as a result of it yielded the most effective efficiency
# alternatively, experiment with e.g. completely different studying charges, ...
batch_size <- n_train

train_dataset <- train_dataset %>% 
  dataset_shuffle(n_train) %>%
  dataset_batch(batch_size)
train_dataset
<BatchDataset shapes: ((None, 338, 6), (None, 6)), varieties: (tf.float64, tf.float64)>

Similar for the take a look at information.

test_x <- test_data$information %>% 
  map(as.matrix) %>%
  pad_sequences(maxlen = pad_size, dtype = "float32") %>%
  tensor_slices_dataset() 

test_y <- test_data$exercise %>% 
  one_hot_classes() %>% 
  tensor_slices_dataset()

n_test <- nrow(test_data)
test_dataset <- zip_datasets(test_x, test_y) %>%
  dataset_batch(n_test)

Utilizing tfdatasets doesn’t imply we can’t run a fast sanity examine on our information:

first <- test_dataset %>% 
  reticulate::as_iterator() %>% 
  # get first batch (= entire take a look at set, in our case)
  reticulate::iter_next() %>%
  # predictors solely
  .[[1]] %>% 
  # first merchandise in batch
  .[1,,]
first
tf.Tensor(
[[ 0.          0.          0.          0.          0.          0.        ]
 [ 0.          0.          0.          0.          0.          0.        ]
 [ 0.          0.          0.          0.          0.          0.        ]
 ...
 [ 1.00416672  0.2375      0.12916666 -0.40225476 -0.20463985 -0.14782938]
 [ 1.04166663  0.26944447  0.12777779 -0.26755899 -0.02779437 -0.1441642 ]
 [ 1.0250001   0.27083334  0.15277778 -0.19639318  0.35094208 -0.16249016]],
 form=(338, 6), dtype=float64)

Now let’s construct the community.

A variational convnet

We construct on the easy convolutional structure from Nick’s publish, simply making minor modifications to kernel sizes and numbers of filters. We additionally throw out all dropout layers; no extra regularization is required on high of the priors utilized to the weights.

Observe the next in regards to the “Bayesified” community.

  • Every layer is variational in nature, the convolutional ones (layer_conv_1d_flipout) in addition to the dense layers (layer_dense_flipout).

  • With variational layers, we will specify the prior weight distribution in addition to the type of the posterior; right here the defaults are used, leading to a regular regular prior and a default mean-field posterior.

  • Likewise, the consumer could affect the divergence perform used to evaluate the mismatch between prior and posterior; on this case, we truly take some motion: We scale the (default) KL divergence by the variety of samples within the coaching set.

  • One last item to notice is the output layer. It’s a distribution layer, that’s, a layer wrapping a distribution – the place wrapping means: Coaching the community is enterprise as normal, however predictions are distributions, one for every information level.

library(tfprobability)

num_classes <- 6

# scale the KL divergence by variety of coaching examples
n <- n_train %>% tf$forged(tf$float32)
kl_div <- perform(q, p, unused)
  tfd_kl_divergence(q, p) / n

mannequin <- keras_model_sequential()
mannequin %>% 
  layer_conv_1d_flipout(
    filters = 12,
    kernel_size = 3, 
    activation = "relu",
    kernel_divergence_fn = kl_div
  ) %>%
  layer_conv_1d_flipout(
    filters = 24,
    kernel_size = 5, 
    activation = "relu",
    kernel_divergence_fn = kl_div
  ) %>%
  layer_conv_1d_flipout(
    filters = 48,
    kernel_size = 7, 
    activation = "relu",
    kernel_divergence_fn = kl_div
  ) %>%
  layer_global_average_pooling_1d() %>% 
  layer_dense_flipout(
    items = 48,
    activation = "relu",
    kernel_divergence_fn = kl_div
  ) %>% 
  layer_dense_flipout(
    num_classes, 
    kernel_divergence_fn = kl_div,
    title = "dense_output"
  ) %>%
  layer_one_hot_categorical(event_size = num_classes)

We inform the community to reduce the destructive log probability.

nll <- perform(y, mannequin) - (mannequin %>% tfd_log_prob(y))

This may change into a part of the loss. The way in which we arrange this instance, this isn’t its most substantial half although. Right here, what dominates the loss is the sum of the KL divergences, added (robotically) to mannequin$losses.

In a setup like this, it’s attention-grabbing to watch each components of the loss individually. We will do that by the use of two metrics:

# the KL a part of the loss
kl_part <-  perform(y_true, y_pred) {
    kl <- tf$reduce_sum(mannequin$losses)
    kl
}

# the NLL half
nll_part <- perform(y_true, y_pred) {
    cat_dist <- tfd_one_hot_categorical(logits = y_pred)
    nll <- - (cat_dist %>% tfd_log_prob(y_true) %>% tf$reduce_mean())
    nll
}

We prepare considerably longer than Nick did within the authentic publish, permitting for early stopping although.

mannequin %>% compile(
  optimizer = "rmsprop",
  loss = nll,
  metrics = c("accuracy", 
              custom_metric("kl_part", kl_part),
              custom_metric("nll_part", nll_part)),
  experimental_run_tf_function = FALSE
)

train_history <- mannequin %>% match(
  train_dataset,
  epochs = 1000,
  validation_data = test_dataset,
  callbacks = listing(
    callback_early_stopping(persistence = 10)
  )
)

Whereas the general loss declines linearly (and doubtless would for a lot of extra epochs), this isn’t the case for classification accuracy or the NLL a part of the loss:

Ultimate accuracy isn’t as excessive as within the non-variational setup, although nonetheless not unhealthy for a six-class downside. We see that with none extra regularization, there may be little or no overfitting to the coaching information.

Now how can we acquire predictions from this mannequin?

Probabilistic predictions

Although we gained’t go into this right here, it’s good to know that we entry extra than simply the output distributions; by means of their kernel_posterior attribute, we will entry the hidden layers’ posterior weight distributions as effectively.

Given the small measurement of the take a look at set, we compute all predictions without delay. The predictions at the moment are categorical distributions, one for every pattern within the batch:

test_data_all <- dataset_collect(test_dataset) %>% { .[[1]][[1]]}

one_shot_preds <- mannequin(test_data_all) 

one_shot_preds
tfp.distributions.OneHotCategorical(
 "sequential_one_hot_categorical_OneHotCategorical_OneHotCategorical",
 batch_shape=[69], event_shape=[6], dtype=float32)

We prefixed these predictions with one_shot to point their noisy nature: These are predictions obtained on a single move by means of the community, all layer weights being sampled from their respective posteriors.

From the anticipated distributions, we calculate imply and customary deviation per (take a look at) pattern.

one_shot_means <- tfd_mean(one_shot_preds) %>% 
  as.matrix() %>%
  as_tibble() %>% 
  mutate(obs = 1:n()) %>% 
  collect(class, imply, -obs) 

one_shot_sds <- tfd_stddev(one_shot_preds) %>% 
  as.matrix() %>%
  as_tibble() %>% 
  mutate(obs = 1:n()) %>% 
  collect(class, sd, -obs) 

The usual deviations thus obtained may very well be stated to mirror the general predictive uncertainty. We will estimate one other form of uncertainty, known as epistemic, by making numerous passes by means of the community after which, calculating – once more, per take a look at pattern – the usual deviations of the anticipated means.

mc_preds <- purrr::map(1:100, perform(x) {
  preds <- mannequin(test_data_all)
  tfd_mean(preds) %>% as.matrix()
})

mc_sds <- abind::abind(mc_preds, alongside = 3) %>% 
  apply(c(1,2), sd) %>% 
  as_tibble() %>%
  mutate(obs = 1:n()) %>% 
  collect(class, mc_sd, -obs) 

Placing all of it collectively, we now have

pred_data <- one_shot_means %>%
  inner_join(one_shot_sds, by = c("obs", "class")) %>% 
  inner_join(mc_sds, by = c("obs", "class")) %>% 
  right_join(one_hot_to_label, by = "class") %>% 
  organize(obs)

pred_data
# A tibble: 414 x 6
     obs class       imply      sd    mc_sd label       
   <int> <chr>      <dbl>   <dbl>    <dbl> <fct>       
 1     1 V1    0.945      0.227   0.0743   STAND_TO_SIT
 2     1 V2    0.0534     0.225   0.0675   SIT_TO_STAND
 3     1 V3    0.00114    0.0338  0.0346   SIT_TO_LIE  
 4     1 V4    0.00000238 0.00154 0.000336 LIE_TO_SIT  
 5     1 V5    0.0000132  0.00363 0.00164  STAND_TO_LIE
 6     1 V6    0.0000305  0.00553 0.00398  LIE_TO_STAND
 7     2 V1    0.993      0.0813  0.149    STAND_TO_SIT
 8     2 V2    0.00153    0.0390  0.102    SIT_TO_STAND
 9     2 V3    0.00476    0.0688  0.108    SIT_TO_LIE  
10     2 V4    0.00000172 0.00131 0.000613 LIE_TO_SIT  
# … with 404 extra rows

Evaluating predictions to the bottom fact:

eval_table <- pred_data %>% 
  group_by(obs) %>% 
  summarise(
    maxprob = max(imply),
    maxprob_sd = sd[mean == maxprob],
    maxprob_mc_sd = mc_sd[mean == maxprob],
    predicted = label[mean == maxprob]
  ) %>% 
  mutate(
    fact = test_data$activityName,
    right = fact == predicted
  ) 

eval_table %>% print(n = 20)
# A tibble: 69 x 7
     obs maxprob maxprob_sd maxprob_mc_sd predicted    fact        right
   <int>   <dbl>      <dbl>         <dbl> <fct>        <fct>        <lgl>  
 1     1   0.945     0.227         0.0743 STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 2     2   0.993     0.0813        0.149  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 3     3   0.733     0.443         0.131  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 4     4   0.796     0.403         0.138  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 5     5   0.843     0.364         0.358  SIT_TO_STAND STAND_TO_SIT FALSE  
 6     6   0.816     0.387         0.176  SIT_TO_STAND STAND_TO_SIT FALSE  
 7     7   0.600     0.490         0.370  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 8     8   0.941     0.236         0.0851 STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
 9     9   0.853     0.355         0.274  SIT_TO_STAND STAND_TO_SIT FALSE  
10    10   0.961     0.195         0.195  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
11    11   0.918     0.275         0.168  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
12    12   0.957     0.203         0.150  STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT TRUE   
13    13   0.987     0.114         0.188  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
14    14   0.974     0.160         0.248  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
15    15   0.996     0.0657        0.0534 SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
16    16   0.886     0.318         0.0868 SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
17    17   0.773     0.419         0.173  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
18    18   0.998     0.0444        0.222  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
19    19   0.885     0.319         0.161  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
20    20   0.930     0.255         0.271  SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND TRUE   
# … with 49 extra rows

Are customary deviations larger for misclassifications?

eval_table %>% 
  group_by(fact, predicted) %>% 
  summarise(avg_mean = imply(maxprob),
            avg_sd = imply(maxprob_sd),
            avg_mc_sd = imply(maxprob_mc_sd)) %>% 
  mutate(right = fact == predicted) %>%
  organize(avg_mc_sd) 
# A tibble: 2 x 5
  right depend avg_mean avg_sd avg_mc_sd
  <lgl>   <int>    <dbl>  <dbl>     <dbl>
1 FALSE      19    0.775  0.380     0.237
2 TRUE       50    0.879  0.264     0.183

They’re; although maybe to not the extent we’d need.

With simply six lessons, we will additionally examine customary deviations on the person prediction-target pairings degree.

eval_table %>% 
  group_by(fact, predicted) %>% 
  summarise(cnt = n(),
            avg_mean = imply(maxprob),
            avg_sd = imply(maxprob_sd),
            avg_mc_sd = imply(maxprob_mc_sd)) %>% 
  mutate(right = fact == predicted) %>%
  organize(desc(cnt), avg_mc_sd) 
# A tibble: 14 x 7
# Teams:   fact [6]
   fact        predicted      cnt avg_mean avg_sd avg_mc_sd right
   <fct>        <fct>        <int>    <dbl>  <dbl>     <dbl> <lgl>  
 1 SIT_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND    12    0.935  0.205    0.184  TRUE   
 2 STAND_TO_SIT STAND_TO_SIT     9    0.871  0.284    0.162  TRUE   
 3 LIE_TO_SIT   LIE_TO_SIT       9    0.765  0.377    0.216  TRUE   
 4 SIT_TO_LIE   SIT_TO_LIE       8    0.908  0.254    0.187  TRUE   
 5 STAND_TO_LIE STAND_TO_LIE     7    0.956  0.144    0.132  TRUE   
 6 LIE_TO_STAND LIE_TO_STAND     5    0.809  0.353    0.227  TRUE   
 7 SIT_TO_LIE   STAND_TO_LIE     4    0.685  0.436    0.233  FALSE  
 8 LIE_TO_STAND SIT_TO_STAND     4    0.909  0.271    0.282  FALSE  
 9 STAND_TO_LIE SIT_TO_LIE       3    0.852  0.337    0.238  FALSE  
10 STAND_TO_SIT SIT_TO_STAND     3    0.837  0.368    0.269  FALSE  
11 LIE_TO_STAND LIE_TO_SIT       2    0.689  0.454    0.233  FALSE  
12 LIE_TO_SIT   STAND_TO_SIT     1    0.548  0.498    0.0805 FALSE  
13 SIT_TO_STAND LIE_TO_STAND     1    0.530  0.499    0.134  FALSE  
14 LIE_TO_SIT   LIE_TO_STAND     1    0.824  0.381    0.231  FALSE  

Once more, we see larger customary deviations for incorrect predictions, however to not a excessive diploma.

Conclusion

We’ve proven easy methods to construct, prepare, and procure predictions from a completely variational convnet. Evidently, there may be room for experimentation: Different layer implementations exist; a unique prior may very well be specified; the divergence may very well be calculated in a different way; and the same old neural community hyperparameter tuning choices apply.

Then, there’s the query of penalties (or: resolution making). What will occur in high-uncertainty instances, what even is a high-uncertainty case? Naturally, questions like these are out-of-scope for this publish, but of important significance in real-world purposes.
Thanks for studying!

Appendix

To be executed earlier than operating this publish’s code. Copied from Classifying bodily exercise from smartphone information.

library(keras)     
library(tidyverse) 

activity_labels <- learn.desk("information/activity_labels.txt", 
                             col.names = c("quantity", "label")) 

one_hot_to_label <- activity_labels %>% 
  mutate(quantity = quantity - 7) %>% 
  filter(quantity >= 0) %>% 
  mutate(class = paste0("V",quantity + 1)) %>% 
  choose(-quantity)

labels <- learn.desk(
  "information/RawData/labels.txt",
  col.names = c("experiment", "userId", "exercise", "startPos", "endPos")
)

dataFiles <- listing.recordsdata("information/RawData")
dataFiles %>% head()

fileInfo <- data_frame(
  filePath = dataFiles
) %>%
  filter(filePath != "labels.txt") %>%
  separate(filePath, sep = '_',
           into = c("kind", "experiment", "userId"),
           take away = FALSE) %>%
  mutate(
    experiment = str_remove(experiment, "exp"),
    userId = str_remove_all(userId, "consumer|.txt")
  ) %>%
  unfold(kind, filePath)

# Learn contents of single file to a dataframe with accelerometer and gyro information.
readInData <- perform(experiment, userId){
  genFilePath = perform(kind) {
    paste0("information/RawData/", kind, "_exp",experiment, "_user", userId, ".txt")
  }
  bind_cols(
    learn.desk(genFilePath("acc"), col.names = c("a_x", "a_y", "a_z")),
    learn.desk(genFilePath("gyro"), col.names = c("g_x", "g_y", "g_z"))
  )
}

# Operate to learn a given file and get the observations contained alongside
# with their lessons.
loadFileData <- perform(curExperiment, curUserId) {

  # load sensor information from file into dataframe
  allData <- readInData(curExperiment, curUserId)
  extractObservation <- perform(startPos, endPos){
    allData[startPos:endPos,]
  }

  # get remark areas on this file from labels dataframe
  dataLabels <- labels %>%
    filter(userId == as.integer(curUserId),
           experiment == as.integer(curExperiment))

  # extract observations as dataframes and save as a column in dataframe.
  dataLabels %>%
    mutate(
      information = map2(startPos, endPos, extractObservation)
    ) %>%
    choose(-startPos, -endPos)
}

# scan by means of all experiment and userId combos and collect information right into a dataframe.
allObservations <- map2_df(fileInfo$experiment, fileInfo$userId, loadFileData) %>%
  right_join(activityLabels, by = c("exercise" = "quantity")) %>%
  rename(activityName = label)

write_rds(allObservations, "allObservations.rds")

allObservations <- readRDS("allObservations.rds")

desiredActivities <- c(
  "STAND_TO_SIT", "SIT_TO_STAND", "SIT_TO_LIE", 
  "LIE_TO_SIT", "STAND_TO_LIE", "LIE_TO_STAND"  
)

filteredObservations <- allObservations %>% 
  filter(activityName %in% desiredActivities) %>% 
  mutate(observationId = 1:n())

# get all customers
userIds <- allObservations$userId %>% distinctive()

# randomly select 24 (80% of 30 people) for coaching
set.seed(42) # seed for reproducibility
trainIds <- pattern(userIds, measurement = 24)

# set the remainder of the customers to the testing set
testIds <- setdiff(userIds,trainIds)

# filter information. 
# observe S.Okay.: renamed to train_data for consistency with 
# variable naming used on this publish
train_data <- filteredObservations %>% 
  filter(userId %in% trainIds)

# observe S.Okay.: renamed to test_data for consistency with 
# variable naming used on this publish
test_data <- filteredObservations %>% 
  filter(userId %in% testIds)

# observe S.Okay.: renamed to pad_size for consistency with 
# variable naming used on this publish
pad_size <- trainData$information %>% 
  map_int(nrow) %>% 
  quantile(p = 0.98) %>% 
  ceiling()

# observe S.Okay.: renamed to one_hot_classes for consistency with 
# variable naming used on this publish
one_hot_classes <- . %>% 
  {. - 7} %>%        # carry integers all the way down to 0-6 from 7-12
  to_categorical()   # One-hot encode
Reyes-Ortiz, Jorge-L., Luca Oneto, Albert Samà, Xavier Parra, and Davide Anguita. 2016. “Transition-Conscious Human Exercise Recognition Utilizing Smartphones.” Neurocomput. 171 (C): 754–67. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neucom.2015.07.085.



Supply hyperlink

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -
Google search engine

Most Popular

Recent Comments