README.md 15.7 KB
Newer Older
C
choijulie 已提交
1 2
# Linear Regression
Let us begin the tutorial with a classical problem called Linear Regression \[[1](#References)\]. In this chapter, we will train a model from a realistic dataset to predict home prices. Some important concepts in Machine Learning will be covered through this example.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
3

L
Luo Tao 已提交
4
The source code for this tutorial lives on [book/fit_a_line](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/book/tree/develop/01.fit_a_line). For instructions on getting started with PaddlePaddle, see [PaddlePaddle installation guide](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/book/blob/develop/README.md#running-the-book).
L
Luo Tao 已提交
5

C
choijulie 已提交
6 7
## Problem Setup
Suppose we have a dataset of $n$ real estate properties. These real estate properties will be referred to as *homes* in this chapter for clarity.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
8

C
choijulie 已提交
9
Each home is associated with $d$ attributes. The attributes describe characteristics such the number of rooms in the home, the number of schools or hospitals in the neighborhood, and the traffic condition nearby.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
10

C
choijulie 已提交
11
In our problem setup, the attribute $x_{i,j}$ denotes the $j$th characteristic of the $i$th home. In addition, $y_i$ denotes the price of the $i$th home. Our task is to predict $y_i$ given a set of attributes $\{x_{i,1}, ..., x_{i,d}\}$. We assume that the price of a home is a linear combination of all of its attributes, namely,
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
12

C
choijulie 已提交
13
$$y_i = \omega_1x_{i,1} + \omega_2x_{i,2} + \ldots + \omega_dx_{i,d} + b,  i=1,\ldots,n$$
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
14

C
choijulie 已提交
15 16 17 18
where $\vec{\omega}$ and $b$ are the model parameters we want to estimate. Once they are learned, we will be able to predict the price of a home, given the attributes associated with it. We call this model **Linear Regression**. In other words, we want to regress a value against several values linearly. In practice, a linear model is often too simplistic to capture the real relationships between the variables. Yet, because Linear Regression is easy to train and analyze, it has been applied to a large number of real problems. As a result, it is an important topic in many classic Statistical Learning and Machine Learning textbooks \[[2,3,4](#References)\].

## Results Demonstration
We first show the result of our model. The dataset [UCI Housing Data Set](https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/Housing) is used to train a linear model to predict the home prices in Boston. The figure below shows the predictions the model makes for some home prices. The $X$-axis represents the median value of the prices of simlilar homes within a bin, while the $Y$-axis represents the home value our linear model predicts. The dotted line represents points where $X=Y$. When reading the diagram, the more precise the model predicts, the closer the point is to the dotted line.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
19
<p align="center">
C
choijulie 已提交
20 21
    <img src = "image/predictions_en.png" width=400><br/>
    Figure 1. Predicted Value V.S. Actual Value
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
22 23
</p>

C
choijulie 已提交
24
## Model Overview
25

C
choijulie 已提交
26
### Model Definition
27

C
choijulie 已提交
28
In the UCI Housing Data Set, there are 13 home attributes $\{x_{i,j}\}$ that are related to the median home price $y_i$, which we aim to predict. Thus, our model can be written as:
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
29 30 31

$$\hat{Y} = \omega_1X_{1} + \omega_2X_{2} + \ldots + \omega_{13}X_{13} + b$$

C
choijulie 已提交
32
where $\hat{Y}$ is the predicted value used to differentiate from actual value $Y$. The model learns parameters $\omega_1, \ldots, \omega_{13}, b$, where the entries of $\vec{\omega}$ are **weights** and $b$ is **bias**.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
33

C
choijulie 已提交
34
Now we need an objective to optimize, so that the learned parameters can make $\hat{Y}$ as close to $Y$ as possible. Let's refer to the concept of [Loss Function (Cost Function)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_function). A loss function must output a non-negative value, given any pair of the actual value $y_i$ and the predicted value $\hat{y_i}$. This value reflects the magnitutude of the model error.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
35

C
choijulie 已提交
36
For Linear Regression, the most common loss function is [Mean Square Error (MSE)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_squared_error) which has the following form:
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
37

38
$$MSE=\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=1}^{n}{(\hat{Y_i}-Y_i)}^2$$
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
39

C
choijulie 已提交
40 41 42
That is, for a dataset of size $n$, MSE is the average value of the the prediction sqaure errors.

### Training
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
43

C
choijulie 已提交
44 45 46 47 48
After setting up our model, there are several major steps to go through to train it:
1. Initialize the parameters including the weights $\vec{\omega}$ and the bias $b$. For example, we can set their mean values as $0$s, and their standard deviations as $1$s.
2. Feedforward. Evaluate the network output and compute the corresponding loss.
3. [Backpropagate](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backpropagation) the errors. The errors will be propagated from the output layer back to the input layer, during which the model parameters will be updated with the corresponding errors.
4. Repeat steps 2~3, until the loss is below a predefined threshold or the maximum number of repeats is reached.
49

C
choijulie 已提交
50
## Dataset
Y
Yi Wang 已提交
51

C
choijulie 已提交
52
### Python Dataset Modules
53

C
choijulie 已提交
54
Our program starts with importing necessary packages:
55

56 57 58
```python
import paddle.v2 as paddle
import paddle.v2.dataset.uci_housing as uci_housing
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
59 60
```

C
choijulie 已提交
61
We encapsulated the [UCI Housing Data Set](https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/datasets/Housing) in our Python module `uci_housing`.  This module can
62

C
choijulie 已提交
63 64
1. download the dataset to `~/.cache/paddle/dataset/uci_housing/housing.data`, if not yet, and
2.  [preprocesses](#preprocessing) the dataset.
65

C
choijulie 已提交
66
### An Introduction of the Dataset
67

C
choijulie 已提交
68
The UCI housing dataset has 506 instances. Each instance describes the attributes of a house in surburban Boston.  The attributes are explained below:
69

C
choijulie 已提交
70
| Attribute Name | Characteristic | Data Type |
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
71
| ------| ------ | ------ |
C
choijulie 已提交
72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101
| CRIM | per capita crime rate by town | Continuous|
| ZN | proportion of residential land zoned for lots over 25,000 sq.ft. | Continuous |
| INDUS | proportion of non-retail business acres per town | Continuous |
| CHAS | Charles River dummy variable | Discrete, 1 if tract bounds river; 0 otherwise|
| NOX | nitric oxides concentration (parts per 10 million) | Continuous |
| RM | average number of rooms per dwelling | Continuous |
| AGE | proportion of owner-occupied units built prior to 1940 | Continuous |
| DIS | weighted distances to five Boston employment centres | Continuous |
| RAD | index of accessibility to radial highways | Continuous |
| TAX | full-value property-tax rate per $10,000 | Continuous |
| PTRATIO | pupil-teacher ratio by town | Continuous |
| B | 1000(Bk - 0.63)^2 where Bk is the proportion of blacks by town | Continuous |
| LSTAT | % lower status of the population | Continuous |
| MEDV | Median value of owner-occupied homes in $1000's | Continuous |

The last entry is the median home price.

### Preprocessing
#### Continuous and Discrete Data
We define a feature vector of length 13 for each home, where each entry corresponds to an attribute. Our first observation is that, among the 13 dimensions, there are 12 continuous dimensions and 1 discrete dimension.

Note that although a discrete value is also written as numeric values such as 0, 1, or 2, its meaning differs from a continuous value drastically.  The linear difference between two discrete values has no meaning. For example, suppose $0$, $1$, and $2$ are used to represent colors *Red*, *Green*, and *Blue* respectively. Judging from the numeric representation of these colors, *Red* differs more from *Blue* than it does from *Green*. Yet in actuality, it is not true that extent to which the color *Blue* is different from *Red* is greater than the extent to which *Green* is different from *Red*. Therefore, when handling a discrete feature that has $d$ possible values, we usually convert it to $d$ new features where each feature takes a binary value, $0$ or $1$, indicating whether the original value is absent or present. Alternatively, the discrete features can be mapped onto a continuous multi-dimensional vector through an embedding table. For our problem here, because CHAS itself is a binary discrete value, we do not need to do any preprocessing.

#### Feature Normalization
We also observe a huge difference among the value ranges of the 13 features (Figure 2). For instance, the values of feature *B* fall in $[0.32, 396.90]$, whereas those of feature *NOX* has a range of $[0.3850, 0.8170]$. An effective optimization would require data normalization. The goal of data normalization is to scale te values of each feature into roughly the same range, perhaps $[-0.5, 0.5]$. Here, we adopt a popular normalization technique where we substract the mean value from the feature value and divide the result by the width of the original range.

There are at least three reasons for [Feature Normalization](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feature_scaling) (Feature Scaling):
- A value range that is too large or too small might cause floating number overflow or underflow during computation.
- Different value ranges might result in varying *importances* of different features to the model (at least in the beginning of the training process). This assumption about the data is often unreasonable, making the optimization difficult, which in turn results in increased training time.
- Many machine learning techniques or models (e.g., *L1/L2 regularization* and *Vector Space Model*) assumes that all the features have roughly zero means and their value ranges are similar.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
102 103

<p align="center">
C
choijulie 已提交
104 105
    <img src = "image/ranges_en.png" width=550><br/>
    Figure 2. The value ranges of the features
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
106 107
</p>

C
choijulie 已提交
108 109 110
#### Prepare Training and Test Sets
We split the dataset in two, one for adjusting the model parameters, namely, for model training, and the other for model testing. The model error on the former is called the **training error**, and the error on the latter is called the **test error**. Our goal in training a model is to find the statistical dependency between the outputs and the inputs, so that we can predict new outputs given new inputs. As a result, the test error reflects the performance of the model better than the training error does. We consider two things when deciding the ratio of the training set to the test set: 1) More training data will decrease the variance of the parameter estimation, yielding more reliable models; 2) More test data will decrease the variance of the test error, yielding more reliable test errors. One standard split ratio is $8:2$.

111

C
choijulie 已提交
112
When training complex models, we usually have one more split: the validation set. Complex models usually have [Hyperparameters](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperparameter_optimization) that need to be set before the training process, such as the number of layers in the network. Because hyperparameters are not part of the model parameters, they cannot be trained using the same loss function. Thus we will try several sets of hyperparameters to train several models and cross-validate them on the validation set to pick the best one; finally, the selected trained model is tested on the test set. Because our model is relatively simple, we will omit this validation process.
113

Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
114

C
choijulie 已提交
115
## Training
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
116

C
choijulie 已提交
117
`fit_a_line/trainer.py` demonstrates the training using [PaddlePaddle](http://paddlepaddle.org).
Y
Yi Wang 已提交
118

C
choijulie 已提交
119
### Initialize PaddlePaddle
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
120

121
```python
122
paddle.init(use_gpu=False, trainer_count=1)
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
123 124
```

C
choijulie 已提交
125
### Model Configuration
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
126

C
choijulie 已提交
127
Logistic regression is essentially a fully-connected layer with linear activation:
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
128

129
```python
130 131
x = paddle.layer.data(name='x', type=paddle.data_type.dense_vector(13))
y_predict = paddle.layer.fc(input=x,
G
gongweibao 已提交
132
                                size=1,
133 134
                                act=paddle.activation.Linear())
y = paddle.layer.data(name='y', type=paddle.data_type.dense_vector(1))
135
cost = paddle.layer.square_error_cost(input=y_predict, label=y)
136
```
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147

### Save Topology

```python
# Save the inference topology to protobuf.
inference_topology = paddle.topology.Topology(layers=y_predict)
with open("inference_topology.pkl", 'wb') as f:
    inference_topology.serialize_for_inference(f)
```


C
choijulie 已提交
148
### Create Parameters
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
149

150
```python
151
parameters = paddle.parameters.create(cost)
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
152 153
```

C
choijulie 已提交
154
### Create Trainer
155

Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
156
```python
G
gongweibao 已提交
157 158
optimizer = paddle.optimizer.Momentum(momentum=0)

159 160 161
trainer = paddle.trainer.SGD(cost=cost,
                             parameters=parameters,
                             update_equation=optimizer)
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
162 163
```

C
choijulie 已提交
164
### Feeding Data
Y
Yi Wang 已提交
165

C
choijulie 已提交
166 167 168
PaddlePaddle provides the
[reader mechanism](https://github.com/PaddlePaddle/Paddle/tree/develop/doc/design/reader)
for loadinng training data. A reader may return multiple columns, and we need a Python dictionary to specify the mapping from column index to data layers.
169

Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
170
```python
Y
Yi Wang 已提交
171 172 173
feeding={'x': 0, 'y': 1}
```

C
choijulie 已提交
174
Moreover, an event handler is provided to print the training progress:
175

L
liaogang 已提交
176
```python
L
liaogang 已提交
177
# event_handler to print training and testing info
L
liaogang 已提交
178 179 180
def event_handler(event):
    if isinstance(event, paddle.event.EndIteration):
        if event.batch_id % 100 == 0:
L
liaogang 已提交
181 182 183
            print "Pass %d, Batch %d, Cost %f" % (
                event.pass_id, event.batch_id, event.cost)

L
liaogang 已提交
184
    if isinstance(event, paddle.event.EndPass):
L
liaogang 已提交
185 186 187 188 189
        result = trainer.test(
            reader=paddle.batch(
                uci_housing.test(), batch_size=2),
            feeding=feeding)
        print "Test %d, Cost %f" % (event.pass_id, result.cost)
L
liaogang 已提交
190 191
```

Y
Yi Wang 已提交
192
```python
193
# event_handler to print training and testing info
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
194
from paddle.v2.plot import Ploter
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
195

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
196 197
train_title = "Train cost"
test_title = "Test cost"
C
choijulie 已提交
198
plot_cost = Ploter(train_title, test_title)
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
199

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
200
step = 0
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
201

L
liaogang 已提交
202
def event_handler_plot(event):
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
203
    global step
204
    if isinstance(event, paddle.event.EndIteration):
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
205
        if step % 10 == 0:  # every 10 batches, record a train cost
C
choijulie 已提交
206
            plot_cost.append(train_title, step, event.cost)
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
207

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
208
        if step % 100 == 0: # every 100 batches, record a test cost
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
209 210 211 212
            result = trainer.test(
                reader=paddle.batch(
                    uci_housing.test(), batch_size=2),
                feeding=feeding)
C
choijulie 已提交
213
            plot_cost.append(test_title, step, result.cost)
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
214 215

        if step % 100 == 0: # every 100 batches, update cost plot
C
choijulie 已提交
216
            plot_cost.plot()
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
217

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
218
        step += 1
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
219 220 221 222 223

    if isinstance(event, paddle.event.EndPass):
        if event.pass_id % 10 == 0:
            with open('params_pass_%d.tar' % event.pass_id, 'w') as f:
                parameters.to_tar(f)
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
224
```
Y
Yi Wang 已提交
225

C
choijulie 已提交
226
### Start Training
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
227

228
```python
229
trainer.train(
G
gongweibao 已提交
230
    reader=paddle.batch(
231 232 233
        paddle.reader.shuffle(
            uci_housing.train(), buf_size=500),
        batch_size=2),
G
gongweibao 已提交
234
    feeding=feeding,
L
liaogang 已提交
235
    event_handler=event_handler_plot,
236
    num_passes=30)
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
237 238
```

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
239
![png](./image/train_and_test.png)
Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
240

Q
qiaolongfei 已提交
241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271
### Apply model

#### 1. generate testing data

```python
test_data_creator = paddle.dataset.uci_housing.test()
test_data = []
test_label = []

for item in test_data_creator():
    test_data.append((item[0],))
    test_label.append(item[1])
    if len(test_data) == 5:
        break
```

#### 2. inference

```python
# load parameters from tar file.
# users can remove the comments and change the model name
# with open('params_pass_20.tar', 'r') as f:
#     parameters = paddle.parameters.Parameters.from_tar(f)

probs = paddle.infer(
    output_layer=y_predict, parameters=parameters, input=test_data)

for i in xrange(len(probs)):
    print "label=" + str(test_label[i][0]) + ", predict=" + str(probs[i][0])
```

C
choijulie 已提交
272 273
## Summary
This chapter introduces *Linear Regression* and how to train and test this model with PaddlePaddle, using the UCI Housing Data Set. Because a large number of more complex models and techniques are derived from linear regression, it is important to understand its underlying theory and limitation.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
274 275


C
choijulie 已提交
276
## References
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
277 278 279
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_regression
2. Friedman J, Hastie T, Tibshirani R. The elements of statistical learning[M]. Springer, Berlin: Springer series in statistics, 2001.
3. Murphy K P. Machine learning: a probabilistic perspective[M]. MIT press, 2012.
Z
zhouxiao-coder 已提交
280
4. Bishop C M. Pattern recognition[J]. Machine Learning, 2006, 128.
L
Luo Tao 已提交
281 282

<br/>
L
Luo Tao 已提交
283
This tutorial is contributed by <a xmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#" href="http://book.paddlepaddle.org" property="cc:attributionName" rel="cc:attributionURL">PaddlePaddle</a>, and licensed under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License</a>.