ensemble-pkg

Combine models, easily.


Keywords
ensemble-learning, infrastructure, machine-learning, modeling-tool, python3
License
MIT
Install
pip install ensemble-pkg==0.0.3

Documentation

ensemble

Combine models, easily.

Model Ensemble

ensemble lets you combine your models and access them by a single object. You may use that ensemble to multiplex between your models, call them all, and aggregate the results. You can do bagging, boosting, stacking, and more. You may even create ensembles of ensembles!

This package borrows the idea of computation graph sessioning from TensorFlow and implements the composite pattern for building tree hierarchies.

Documentation

Documentation Status

Read the docs at ensemble-pkg.readthedocs.io

Installation

pip install ensemble-pkg

Case Study

Let's say we have two models that accomplish a binary classification task. We want to be able to easily combine the two models into an ensemble and then test the precision and recall of both models and the ensemble. With this package, it's easy.

We start off by building our two models for a dataset. In this case, the task is classifying if a number is divisble by 15. We have two models, one says the number is divisble by 15 if it is divisble by 3 and the other says so if it is divisble by 5.

def model1(x):
  return x % 3 == 0

def model2(x):
  return x % 5 == 0

def get_dataset():
  return [(i, i % 15 == 0) for i in range(1, 101)]

Define a function that gets our precision and recall for a given dataset and set of predictions:

def get_results(dataset, preds):
  labels = [label for _, label in dataset]
  positives = sum(1 for label in labels if label)
  predicted_positives = sum(1 for pred in preds if pred)
  true_positives = sum(1 for label, pred in zip(labels, preds) if label and pred)
  return 100.0 * true_positives / predicted_positives, 100.0 * true_positives / positives

Next we build a model ensemble from model1 and model2, specifically one that only outputs True if all its children output True. In this case, the ensemble would then only output True if the input is both divisible by 3 and 5.

e = Ensemble('ensemble', children=[model1, model2], mode='all')
e(x=3) # returns False
e(x=5) # returns False
e(x=15) # returns True

Finally, lets build another ensemble from our two models and the ensemble in order to easily aggregate the precision and recall stats for each model. We do this by decorating each child model with an evaluation decorator which modifies the models to take a dataset and output precision and recall, instead of taking a number and outputing True or False.

def evaluate(model):
  def wrapper(dataset):
    preds = [model(x=x) for x, _ in dataset]
    precision, recall = get_results(dataset, preds)
    return {
      'precision': f'{precision:.1f}%',
      'recall': f'{recall:.1f}%',
    }
  return wrapper

results = Ensemble('results', children=[model1, model2, e])
results.decorate_children(evaluate)

Finally we run results(dataset=get_dataset()) and get the following results as expected!

{'ensemble': {'precision': '100.0%', 'recall': '100.0%'},
 'model1': {'precision': '18.2%', 'recall': '100.0%'},
 'model2': {'precision': '30.0%', 'recall': '100.0%'}}

In a few keystrokes, we built the following graph structure.

Graph Structure

Examples

Define your model functions and create your ensemble:

>>> from ensemble import Ensemble
>>> def square(x):
...     return x**2
>>> def cube(x):
...     return x**3
>>> e = Ensemble(name='e1', children=[square, cube])

Call all the models in the ensemble:

>>> e(x=2)
{'square': 4, 'cube': 8}
>>> e(x=3)
{'square': 9, 'cube': 27}

Multiplex between functions:

>>> e.multiplex('square', x=2)
4
>>> e.multiplex('cube', x=3)
27

You may instead decorate your model functions with @child in order to attach them to an ensemble:

>>> from ensemble import child
>>> @child('e2')
... def func1(x):
...     return x**2
...
>>> @child('e2')
... def func2(x):
...     return x**3
...
>>> e = Ensemble('e2')
>>> e(x=3)
{'func1': 9, 'func2': 27}

You may even attach a model to multiple ensembles!

>>> @child('e2', 'e3')
... def func3(x, y):
...     return x**3 + y
...
>>> e2(x=2, y=3)
{'func1': 4, 'func2': 8, 'func3': 11}
>>>
>>> e3 = Ensemble('e3')
>>> e3(x=2, y=3)
{'func3': 11}

Compute statstical aggregations from your ensemble's models:

>>> def a(x):
...   return x + 1
...
>>> def b(y):
...   return y + 2
...
>>> def c(z):
...   return z + 2
...
>>> e = Ensemble('e4', children=[a, b], weights=[3.0, 1.0])
>>> e.mean(x=2, y=3)
4.0
>>> e.weighted_mean(x=2, y=3)
3.5
>>> e.weighted_sum(x=2, y=3)
14.0
>>> e = Ensemble('e6', [a, b, c])
>>> e.vote(x=1, y=1, z=1)
3

Build ensembles of ensembles!

>>> first_ensemble = Ensemble('first', children=[c])
>>> second_ensemble = Ensemble('second', children=[a, b])
>>> parent_ensemble = Ensemble('parent', children=[first_ensemble, second_ensemble])
>>> parent_ensemble(x=1, y=1, z=1)
{'first': {'c': 3}, 'second': {'a': 2, 'b': 3}}
>>> parent_ensemble.multiplex('second', x=3, y=1)
{'a': 4, 'b': 3}

Use that idea to chain aggregate computations! Compute the mean of the sum of the model outputs in each ensemble:

>>> first_ensemble.set_mode('sum')
Ensemble(name='first', children=['c'], weights=None, mode='sum')
>>> second_ensemble.set_mode('sum')
Ensemble(name='second', children=['a', 'b'], weights=None, mode='sum')
>>> parent_ensemble.mean(x=1, y=1, z=1)
4.0

If you forget what models are in your ensemble, just check:

>>> print(parent_ensemble)
Ensemble(name='parent', children=['first', 'second'], weights=None, mode='all')
  Ensemble(name='first', children=['c'], weights=None, mode='sum')
    Model(name='c', func=c(z))
  Ensemble(name='second', children=['a', 'b'], weights=None, mode='sum')
    Model(name='a', func=a(x))
    Model(name='b', func=b(y))

In the above example, a tree is shown which shows which models and ensembles are the children of which ensembles!