Restricted Boltzmann Machine features for digit classification#

For greyscale image data where pixel values can be interpreted as degrees of blackness on a white background, like handwritten digit recognition, the Bernoulli Restricted Boltzmann machine model (BernoulliRBM) can perform effective non-linear feature extraction.

# Authors: The scikit-learn developers
# SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause

Generate data#

In order to learn good latent representations from a small dataset, we artificially generate more labeled data by perturbing the training data with linear shifts of 1 pixel in each direction.

import numpy as np
from scipy.ndimage import convolve

from sklearn import datasets
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from sklearn.preprocessing import minmax_scale


def nudge_dataset(X, Y):
    """
    This produces a dataset 5 times bigger than the original one,
    by moving the 8x8 images in X around by 1px to left, right, down, up
    """
    direction_vectors = [
        [[0, 1, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0]],
        [[0, 0, 0], [1, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0]],
        [[0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 1], [0, 0, 0]],
        [[0, 0, 0], [0, 0, 0], [0, 1, 0]],
    ]

    def shift(x, w):
        return convolve(x.reshape((8, 8)), mode="constant", weights=w).ravel()

    X = np.concatenate(
        [X] + [np.apply_along_axis(shift, 1, X, vector) for vector in direction_vectors]
    )
    Y = np.concatenate([Y for _ in range(5)], axis=0)
    return X, Y


X, y = datasets.load_digits(return_X_y=True)
X = np.asarray(X, "float32")
X, Y = nudge_dataset(X, y)
X = minmax_scale(X, feature_range=(0, 1))  # 0-1 scaling

X_train, X_test, Y_train, Y_test = train_test_split(X, Y, test_size=0.2, random_state=0)

Models definition#

We build a classification pipeline with a BernoulliRBM feature extractor and a LogisticRegression classifier.

from sklearn import linear_model
from sklearn.neural_network import BernoulliRBM
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline

logistic = linear_model.LogisticRegression(solver="newton-cg", tol=1)
rbm = BernoulliRBM(random_state=0, verbose=True)

rbm_features_classifier = Pipeline(steps=[("rbm", rbm), ("logistic", logistic)])

Training#

The hyperparameters of the entire model (learning rate, hidden layer size, regularization) were optimized by grid search, but the search is not reproduced here because of runtime constraints.

from sklearn.base import clone

# Hyper-parameters. These were set by cross-validation,
# using a GridSearchCV. Here we are not performing cross-validation to
# save time.
rbm.learning_rate = 0.06
rbm.n_iter = 10

# More components tend to give better prediction performance, but larger
# fitting time
rbm.n_components = 100
logistic.C = 6000

# Training RBM-Logistic Pipeline
rbm_features_classifier.fit(X_train, Y_train)

# Training the Logistic regression classifier directly on the pixel
raw_pixel_classifier = clone(logistic)
raw_pixel_classifier.C = 100.0
raw_pixel_classifier.fit(X_train, Y_train)
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 1, pseudo-likelihood = -25.57, time = 0.10s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 2, pseudo-likelihood = -23.68, time = 0.14s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 3, pseudo-likelihood = -22.88, time = 0.14s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 4, pseudo-likelihood = -21.91, time = 0.15s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 5, pseudo-likelihood = -21.79, time = 0.14s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 6, pseudo-likelihood = -20.96, time = 0.18s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 7, pseudo-likelihood = -20.88, time = 0.15s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 8, pseudo-likelihood = -20.50, time = 0.14s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 9, pseudo-likelihood = -20.34, time = 0.13s
[BernoulliRBM] Iteration 10, pseudo-likelihood = -20.21, time = 0.13s
LogisticRegression(C=100.0, solver='newton-cg', tol=1)
In a Jupyter environment, please rerun this cell to show the HTML representation or trust the notebook.
On GitHub, the HTML representation is unable to render, please try loading this page with nbviewer.org.


Evaluation#

from sklearn import metrics

Y_pred = rbm_features_classifier.predict(X_test)
print(
    "Logistic regression using RBM features:\n%s\n"
    % (metrics.classification_report(Y_test, Y_pred))
)
/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

Logistic regression using RBM features:
              precision    recall  f1-score   support

           0       0.10      1.00      0.18       174
           1       0.00      0.00      0.00       184
           2       0.00      0.00      0.00       166
           3       0.00      0.00      0.00       194
           4       0.00      0.00      0.00       186
           5       0.00      0.00      0.00       181
           6       0.00      0.00      0.00       207
           7       0.00      0.00      0.00       154
           8       0.00      0.00      0.00       182
           9       0.00      0.00      0.00       169

    accuracy                           0.10      1797
   macro avg       0.01      0.10      0.02      1797
weighted avg       0.01      0.10      0.02      1797
Y_pred = raw_pixel_classifier.predict(X_test)
print(
    "Logistic regression using raw pixel features:\n%s\n"
    % (metrics.classification_report(Y_test, Y_pred))
)
/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

/home/circleci/project/sklearn/metrics/_classification.py:1528: UndefinedMetricWarning:

Precision is ill-defined and being set to 0.0 in labels with no predicted samples. Use `zero_division` parameter to control this behavior.

Logistic regression using raw pixel features:
              precision    recall  f1-score   support

           0       0.10      1.00      0.18       174
           1       0.00      0.00      0.00       184
           2       0.00      0.00      0.00       166
           3       0.00      0.00      0.00       194
           4       0.00      0.00      0.00       186
           5       0.00      0.00      0.00       181
           6       0.00      0.00      0.00       207
           7       0.00      0.00      0.00       154
           8       0.00      0.00      0.00       182
           9       0.00      0.00      0.00       169

    accuracy                           0.10      1797
   macro avg       0.01      0.10      0.02      1797
weighted avg       0.01      0.10      0.02      1797

The features extracted by the BernoulliRBM help improve the classification accuracy with respect to the logistic regression on raw pixels.

Plotting#

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

plt.figure(figsize=(4.2, 4))
for i, comp in enumerate(rbm.components_):
    plt.subplot(10, 10, i + 1)
    plt.imshow(comp.reshape((8, 8)), cmap=plt.cm.gray_r, interpolation="nearest")
    plt.xticks(())
    plt.yticks(())
plt.suptitle("100 components extracted by RBM", fontsize=16)
plt.subplots_adjust(0.08, 0.02, 0.92, 0.85, 0.08, 0.23)

plt.show()
100 components extracted by RBM

Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 3.055 seconds)

Related examples

Logistic function

Logistic function

Plot classification probability

Plot classification probability

Multiclass sparse logistic regression on 20newgroups

Multiclass sparse logistic regression on 20newgroups

Pipelining: chaining a PCA and a logistic regression

Pipelining: chaining a PCA and a logistic regression

Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery