[scikit-learn] Can fit a model with a target array of probabilities?
Stuart Reynolds
stuart at stuartreynolds.net
Thu Oct 5 15:00:29 EDT 2017
Hi Sean,
I'll have a look glmnet (looks like its compiled from fortran!). Does
it offer much over statsmodel's GLM? This looks great for researchy
stuff, although a little less performant.
- Stu
On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 10:32 AM, Sean Violante <sean.violante at gmail.com> wrote:
> Stuart
> have you tried glmnet ( in R) there is a python version
> https://web.stanford.edu/~hastie/glmnet_python/ ....
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 6:34 PM, Stuart Reynolds <stuart at stuartreynolds.net>
> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks Josef. Was very useful.
>>
>> result.remove_data() reduces a 5 parameter Logit result object from
>> megabytes to 5Kb (as compared to a minimum uncompressed size of the
>> parameters of ~320 bytes). Is big improvement. I'll experiment with
>> what you suggest -- since this is still >10x larger than possible. I
>> think the difference is mostly attribute names.
>> I don't mind the lack of a multinomial support. I've often had better
>> results mixing independent models for each class.
>>
>> I'll experiment with the different solvers. I tried the Logit model
>> in the past -- its fit function only exposed a maxiter, and not a
>> tolerance -- meaning I had to set maxiter very high. The newer
>> statsmodels GLM module looks great and seem to solve this.
>>
>> For other who come this way, I think the magic for ridge regression is:
>>
>> from statsmodels.genmod.generalized_linear_model import GLM
>> from statsmodels.genmod.generalized_linear_model import families
>> from statsmodels.genmod.generalized_linear_model.families import
>> links
>>
>> model = GLM(y, Xtrain, family=families.Binomial(link=links.Logit))
>> result = model.fit_regularized(method='elastic_net',
>> alpha=l2weight, L1_wt=0.0, tol=...)
>> result.remove_data()
>> result.predict(Xtest)
>>
>> One last thing -- its clear that it should be possible to do something
>> like scikit's LogisticRegressionCV in order to quickly optimize a
>> single parameter by re-using past coefficients.
>> Are there any wrappers in statsmodels for doing this or should I roll my
>> own?
>>
>>
>> - Stu
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 4, 2017 at 3:43 PM, <josef.pktd at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> > On Wed, Oct 4, 2017 at 4:26 PM, Stuart Reynolds
>> > <stuart at stuartreynolds.net>
>> > wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Hi Andy,
>> >> Thanks -- I'll give another statsmodels another go.
>> >> I remember I had some fitting speed issues with it in the past, and
>> >> also some issues related their models keeping references to the data
>> >> (=disaster for serialization and multiprocessing) -- although that was
>> >> a long time ago.
>> >
>> >
>> > The second has not changed and will not change, but there is a
>> > remove_data
>> > method that deletes all references to full, data sized arrays. However,
>> > once
>> > the data is removed, it is not possible anymore to compute any new
>> > results
>> > statistics which are almost all lazily computed.
>> > The fitting speed depends a lot on the optimizer, convergence criteria
>> > and
>> > difficulty of the problem, and availability of good starting parameters.
>> > Almost all nonlinear estimation problems use the scipy optimizers, all
>> > unconstrained optimizers can be used. There are no optimized special
>> > methods
>> > for cases with a very large number of features.
>> >
>> > Multinomial/multiclass models don't support continuous response (yet),
>> > all
>> > other GLM and discrete models allow for continuous data in the interval
>> > extension of the domain.
>> >
>> > Josef
>> >
>> >
>> >>
>> >> - Stuart
>> >>
>> >> On Wed, Oct 4, 2017 at 1:09 PM, Andreas Mueller <t3kcit at gmail.com>
>> >> wrote:
>> >> > Hi Stuart.
>> >> > There is no interface to do this in scikit-learn (and maybe we should
>> >> > at
>> >> > this to the FAQ).
>> >> > Yes, in principle this would be possible with several of the models.
>> >> >
>> >> > I think statsmodels can do that, and I think I saw another glm
>> >> > package
>> >> > for Python that does that?
>> >> >
>> >> > It's certainly a legitimate use-case but would require substantial
>> >> > changes to the code. I think so far we decided not to support
>> >> > this in scikit-learn. Basically we don't have a concept of a link
>> >> > function, and it's a concept that only applies to a subset of models.
>> >> > We try to have a consistent interface for all our estimators, and
>> >> > this doesn't really fit well within that interface.
>> >> >
>> >> > Hth,
>> >> > Andy
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> > On 10/04/2017 03:58 PM, Stuart Reynolds wrote:
>> >> >>
>> >> >> I'd like to fit a model that maps a matrix of continuous inputs to a
>> >> >> target that's between 0 and 1 (a probability).
>> >> >>
>> >> >> In principle, I'd expect logistic regression should work out of the
>> >> >> box with no modification (although its often posed as being strictly
>> >> >> for classification, its loss function allows for fitting targets in
>> >> >> the range 0 to 1, and not strictly zero or one.)
>> >> >>
>> >> >> However, scikit's LogisticRegression and LogisticRegressionCV reject
>> >> >> target arrays that are continuous. Other LR implementations allow a
>> >> >> matrix of probability estimates. Looking at:
>> >> >>
>> >> >>
>> >> >>
>> >> >> http://scikit-learn-general.narkive.com/4dSCktaM/using-logistic-regression-on-a-continuous-target-variable
>> >> >> and the fix here:
>> >> >> https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/pull/5084, which
>> >> >> disables
>> >> >> continuous inputs, it looks like there was some reason for this. So
>> >> >> ... I'm looking for alternatives.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> SGDClassifier allows log loss and (if I understood the docs
>> >> >> correctly)
>> >> >> adds a logistic link function, but also rejects continuous targets.
>> >> >> Oddly, SGDRegressor only allows ‘squared_loss’, ‘huber’,
>> >> >> ‘epsilon_insensitive’, or ‘squared_epsilon_insensitive’, and doesn't
>> >> >> seems to give a logistic function.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> In principle, GLM allow this, but scikit's docs say the GLM models
>> >> >> only allows strict linear functions of their input, and doesn't
>> >> >> allow
>> >> >> a logistic link function. The docs direct people to the
>> >> >> LogisticRegression class for this case.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> In R, there is:
>> >> >>
>> >> >> glm(Total_Service_Points_Won/Total_Service_Points_Played ~ ... ,
>> >> >> family = binomial(link=logit), weights =
>> >> >> Total_Service_Points_Played)
>> >> >> which would be ideal.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Is something similar available in scikit? (Or any continuous model
>> >> >> that takes and 0 to 1 target and outputs a 0 to 1 target?)
>> >> >>
>> >> >> I was surprised to see that the implementation of
>> >> >> CalibratedClassifierCV(method="sigmoid") uses an internal
>> >> >> implementation of logistic regression to do its logistic regressing
>> >> >> --
>> >> >> which I can use, although I'd prefer to use a user-facing library.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Thanks,
>> >> >> - Stuart
>> >> >> _______________________________________________
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