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%matplotlib inline

Model Complexity Influence

Demonstrate how model complexity influences both prediction accuracy and computational performance.

We will be using two datasets:

- `diabetes_dataset` for regression.
  This dataset consists of 10 measurements taken from diabetes patients.
  The task is to predict disease progression;
- `20newsgroups_dataset` for classification. This dataset consists of
  newsgroup posts. The task is to predict on which topic (out of 20 topics)
  the post is written about.

We will model the complexity influence on three different estimators:

- :class:`~sklearn.linear_model.SGDClassifier` (for classification data)
  which implements stochastic gradient descent learning;

- :class:`~sklearn.svm.NuSVR` (for regression data) which implements
  Nu support vector regression;

- :class:`~sklearn.ensemble.GradientBoostingRegressor` (for regression
  data) which builds an additive model in a forward stage-wise fashion.


We make the model complexity vary through the choice of relevant model parameters in each of our selected models. Next, we will measure the influence on both computational performance (latency) and predictive power (MSE or Hamming Loss).

In [ ]:
print(__doc__)

# Authors: Eustache Diemert <[email protected]>
#          Maria Telenczuk <https://github.com/maikia>
#          Guillaume Lemaitre <[email protected]>
# License: BSD 3 clause

import time
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

from sklearn import datasets
from sklearn.utils import shuffle
from sklearn.metrics import mean_squared_error
from sklearn.svm import NuSVR
from sklearn.ensemble import GradientBoostingRegressor
from sklearn.linear_model import SGDClassifier
from sklearn.metrics import hamming_loss


# Initialize random generator
np.random.seed(0)

Load the data

First we load both datasets.

Note

We are using :func:`~sklearn.datasets.fetch_20newsgroups_vectorized` to download 20 newsgroups dataset. It returns ready-to-use features.

Note

``X`` of the 20 newsgroups dataset is a sparse matrix while ``X`` of diabetes dataset is a numpy array.

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def generate_data(case):
    """Generate regression/classification data."""
    if case == 'regression':
        X, y = datasets.load_diabetes(return_X_y=True)
    elif case == 'classification':
        X, y = datasets.fetch_20newsgroups_vectorized(subset='all',
                                                      return_X_y=True)
    X, y = shuffle(X, y)
    offset = int(X.shape[0] * 0.8)
    X_train, y_train = X[:offset], y[:offset]
    X_test, y_test = X[offset:], y[offset:]

    data = {'X_train': X_train, 'X_test': X_test, 'y_train': y_train,
            'y_test': y_test}
    return data


regression_data = generate_data('regression')
classification_data = generate_data('classification')

Benchmark influence

Next, we can calculate the influence of the parameters on the given estimator. In each round, we will set the estimator with the new value of changing_param and we will be collecting the prediction times, prediction performance and complexities to see how those changes affect the estimator. We will calculate the complexity using complexity_computer passed as a parameter.

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def benchmark_influence(conf):
    """
    Benchmark influence of `changing_param` on both MSE and latency.
    """
    prediction_times = []
    prediction_powers = []
    complexities = []
    for param_value in conf['changing_param_values']:
        conf['tuned_params'][conf['changing_param']] = param_value
        estimator = conf['estimator'](**conf['tuned_params'])

        print("Benchmarking %s" % estimator)
        estimator.fit(conf['data']['X_train'], conf['data']['y_train'])
        conf['postfit_hook'](estimator)
        complexity = conf['complexity_computer'](estimator)
        complexities.append(complexity)
        start_time = time.time()
        for _ in range(conf['n_samples']):
            y_pred = estimator.predict(conf['data']['X_test'])
        elapsed_time = (time.time() - start_time) / float(conf['n_samples'])
        prediction_times.append(elapsed_time)
        pred_score = conf['prediction_performance_computer'](
            conf['data']['y_test'], y_pred)
        prediction_powers.append(pred_score)
        print("Complexity: %d | %s: %.4f | Pred. Time: %fs\n" % (
            complexity, conf['prediction_performance_label'], pred_score,
            elapsed_time))
    return prediction_powers, prediction_times, complexities

Choose parameters

We choose the parameters for each of our estimators by making a dictionary with all the necessary values. changing_param is the name of the parameter which will vary in each estimator. Complexity will be defined by the complexity_label and calculated using complexity_computer. Also note that depending on the estimator type we are passing different data.

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def _count_nonzero_coefficients(estimator):
    a = estimator.coef_.toarray()
    return np.count_nonzero(a)


configurations = [
    {'estimator': SGDClassifier,
     'tuned_params': {'penalty': 'elasticnet', 'alpha': 0.001, 'loss':
                      'modified_huber', 'fit_intercept': True, 'tol': 1e-3},
     'changing_param': 'l1_ratio',
     'changing_param_values': [0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 0.9],
     'complexity_label': 'non_zero coefficients',
     'complexity_computer': _count_nonzero_coefficients,
     'prediction_performance_computer': hamming_loss,
     'prediction_performance_label': 'Hamming Loss (Misclassification Ratio)',
     'postfit_hook': lambda x: x.sparsify(),
     'data': classification_data,
     'n_samples': 30},
    {'estimator': NuSVR,
     'tuned_params': {'C': 1e3, 'gamma': 2 ** -15},
     'changing_param': 'nu',
     'changing_param_values': [0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 0.9],
     'complexity_label': 'n_support_vectors',
     'complexity_computer': lambda x: len(x.support_vectors_),
     'data': regression_data,
     'postfit_hook': lambda x: x,
     'prediction_performance_computer': mean_squared_error,
     'prediction_performance_label': 'MSE',
     'n_samples': 30},
    {'estimator': GradientBoostingRegressor,
     'tuned_params': {'loss': 'ls'},
     'changing_param': 'n_estimators',
     'changing_param_values': [10, 50, 100, 200, 500],
     'complexity_label': 'n_trees',
     'complexity_computer': lambda x: x.n_estimators,
     'data': regression_data,
     'postfit_hook': lambda x: x,
     'prediction_performance_computer': mean_squared_error,
     'prediction_performance_label': 'MSE',
     'n_samples': 30},
]

Run the code and plot the results

We defined all the functions required to run our benchmark. Now, we will loop over the different configurations that we defined previously. Subsequently, we can analyze the plots obtained from the benchmark: Relaxing the L1 penalty in the SGD classifier reduces the prediction error but leads to an increase in the training time. We can draw a similar analysis regarding the training time which increases with the number of support vectors with a Nu-SVR. However, we observed that there is an optimal number of support vectors which reduces the prediction error. Indeed, too few support vectors lead to an under-fitted model while too many support vectors lead to an over-fitted model. The exact same conclusion can be drawn for the gradient-boosting model. The only the difference with the Nu-SVR is that having too many trees in the ensemble is not as detrimental.

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def plot_influence(conf, mse_values, prediction_times, complexities):
    """
    Plot influence of model complexity on both accuracy and latency.
    """

    fig = plt.figure()
    fig.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

    # first axes (prediction error)
    ax1 = fig.add_subplot(111)
    line1 = ax1.plot(complexities, mse_values, c='tab:blue', ls='-')[0]
    ax1.set_xlabel('Model Complexity (%s)' % conf['complexity_label'])
    y1_label = conf['prediction_performance_label']
    ax1.set_ylabel(y1_label)

    ax1.spines['left'].set_color(line1.get_color())
    ax1.yaxis.label.set_color(line1.get_color())
    ax1.tick_params(axis='y', colors=line1.get_color())

    # second axes (latency)
    ax2 = fig.add_subplot(111, sharex=ax1, frameon=False)
    line2 = ax2.plot(complexities, prediction_times, c='tab:orange', ls='-')[0]
    ax2.yaxis.tick_right()
    ax2.yaxis.set_label_position("right")
    y2_label = "Time (s)"
    ax2.set_ylabel(y2_label)
    ax1.spines['right'].set_color(line2.get_color())
    ax2.yaxis.label.set_color(line2.get_color())
    ax2.tick_params(axis='y', colors=line2.get_color())

    plt.legend((line1, line2), ("prediction error", "latency"),
               loc='upper right')

    plt.title("Influence of varying '%s' on %s" % (conf['changing_param'],
                                                   conf['estimator'].__name__))


for conf in configurations:
    prediction_performances, prediction_times, complexities = \
        benchmark_influence(conf)
    plot_influence(conf, prediction_performances, prediction_times,
                   complexities)
plt.show()

Conclusion

As a conclusion, we can deduce the following insights:

  • a model which is more complex (or expressive) will require a larger training time;
  • a more complex model does not guarantee to reduce the prediction error.

These aspects are related to model generalization and avoiding model under-fitting or over-fitting.