Keras + Hyperopt: A very simple wrapper for convenient hyperparameter optimization

Overview

This project is now archived. It's been fun working on it, but it's time for me to move on. Thank you for all the support and feedback over the last couple of years. If someone is interested in taking ownership, let's discuss. ✌️

Hyperas Build Status PyPI version

A very simple convenience wrapper around hyperopt for fast prototyping with keras models. Hyperas lets you use the power of hyperopt without having to learn the syntax of it. Instead, just define your keras model as you are used to, but use a simple template notation to define hyper-parameter ranges to tune.

Installation

pip install hyperas

Quick start

Assume you have data generated as such

def data():
    x_train = np.zeros(100)
    x_test = np.zeros(100)
    y_train = np.zeros(100)
    y_test = np.zeros(100)
    return x_train, y_train, x_test, y_test

and an existing keras model like the following

def create_model(x_train, y_train, x_test, y_test):
    model = Sequential()
    model.add(Dense(512, input_shape=(784,)))
    model.add(Activation('relu'))
    model.add(Dropout(0.2))
    model.add(Dense(512))
    model.add(Activation('relu'))
    model.add(Dropout(0.2))
    model.add(Dense(10))
    model.add(Activation('softmax'))

    # ... model fitting

    return model

To do hyper-parameter optimization on this model, just wrap the parameters you want to optimize into double curly brackets and choose a distribution over which to run the algorithm.

In the above example, let's say we want to optimize for the best dropout probability in both dropout layers. Choosing a uniform distribution over the interval [0,1], this translates into the following definition. Note that before returning the model, to optimize, we also have to define which evaluation metric of the model is important to us. For example, in the following, we optimize for accuracy.

Note: In the following code we use 'loss': -accuracy, i.e. the negative of accuracy. That's because under the hood hyperopt will always minimize whatever metric you provide. If instead you want to actually want to minimize a metric, say MSE or another loss function, you keep a positive sign (e.g. 'loss': mse).

from hyperas.distributions import uniform

def create_model(x_train, y_train, x_test, y_test):
    model = Sequential()
    model.add(Dense(512, input_shape=(784,)))
    model.add(Activation('relu'))
    model.add(Dropout({{uniform(0, 1)}}))
    model.add(Dense(512))
    model.add(Activation('relu'))
    model.add(Dropout({{uniform(0, 1)}}))
    model.add(Dense(10))
    model.add(Activation('softmax'))

    # ... model fitting

    score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, verbose=0)
    accuracy = score[1]
    return {'loss': -accuracy, 'status': STATUS_OK, 'model': model}

The last step is to actually run the optimization, which is done as follows:

best_run = optim.minimize(model=create_model,
                          data=data,
                          algo=tpe.suggest,
                          max_evals=10,
                          trials=Trials())

In this example we use at most 10 evaluation runs and the TPE algorithm from hyperopt for optimization.

Check the "complete example" below for more details.

Complete example

Note: It is important to wrap your data and model into functions as shown below, and then pass them as parameters to the minimizer. data() returns the data the create_model() needs. An extended version of the above example in one script reads as follows. This example shows many potential use cases of hyperas, including:

  • Varying dropout probabilities, sampling from a uniform distribution
  • Different layer output sizes
  • Different optimization algorithms to use
  • Varying choices of activation functions
  • Conditionally adding layers depending on a choice
  • Swapping whole sets of layers
from __future__ import print_function
import numpy as np

from hyperopt import Trials, STATUS_OK, tpe
from keras.datasets import mnist
from keras.layers.core import Dense, Dropout, Activation
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.utils import np_utils

from hyperas import optim
from hyperas.distributions import choice, uniform


def data():
    """
    Data providing function:

    This function is separated from create_model() so that hyperopt
    won't reload data for each evaluation run.
    """
    (x_train, y_train), (x_test, y_test) = mnist.load_data()
    x_train = x_train.reshape(60000, 784)
    x_test = x_test.reshape(10000, 784)
    x_train = x_train.astype('float32')
    x_test = x_test.astype('float32')
    x_train /= 255
    x_test /= 255
    nb_classes = 10
    y_train = np_utils.to_categorical(y_train, nb_classes)
    y_test = np_utils.to_categorical(y_test, nb_classes)
    return x_train, y_train, x_test, y_test


def create_model(x_train, y_train, x_test, y_test):
    """
    Model providing function:

    Create Keras model with double curly brackets dropped-in as needed.
    Return value has to be a valid python dictionary with two customary keys:
        - loss: Specify a numeric evaluation metric to be minimized
        - status: Just use STATUS_OK and see hyperopt documentation if not feasible
    The last one is optional, though recommended, namely:
        - model: specify the model just created so that we can later use it again.
    """
    model = Sequential()
    model.add(Dense(512, input_shape=(784,)))
    model.add(Activation('relu'))
    model.add(Dropout({{uniform(0, 1)}}))
    model.add(Dense({{choice([256, 512, 1024])}}))
    model.add(Activation({{choice(['relu', 'sigmoid'])}}))
    model.add(Dropout({{uniform(0, 1)}}))

    # If we choose 'four', add an additional fourth layer
    if {{choice(['three', 'four'])}} == 'four':
        model.add(Dense(100))

        # We can also choose between complete sets of layers

        model.add({{choice([Dropout(0.5), Activation('linear')])}})
        model.add(Activation('relu'))

    model.add(Dense(10))
    model.add(Activation('softmax'))

    model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy', metrics=['accuracy'],
                  optimizer={{choice(['rmsprop', 'adam', 'sgd'])}})

    result = model.fit(x_train, y_train,
              batch_size={{choice([64, 128])}},
              epochs=2,
              verbose=2,
              validation_split=0.1)
    #get the highest validation accuracy of the training epochs
    validation_acc = np.amax(result.history['val_acc']) 
    print('Best validation acc of epoch:', validation_acc)
    return {'loss': -validation_acc, 'status': STATUS_OK, 'model': model}


if __name__ == '__main__':
    best_run, best_model = optim.minimize(model=create_model,
                                          data=data,
                                          algo=tpe.suggest,
                                          max_evals=5,
                                          trials=Trials())
    X_train, Y_train, X_test, Y_test = data()
    print("Evalutation of best performing model:")
    print(best_model.evaluate(X_test, Y_test))
    print("Best performing model chosen hyper-parameters:")
    print(best_run)

FAQ

Here is a list of a few popular errors

TypeError: require string label

You're probably trying to execute the model creation code, with the templates, directly in python. That fails simply because python cannot run the templating in the braces, e.g. {{uniform..}}. The def create_model(...) function is in fact not a valid python function anymore.

You need to wrap your code in a def create_model(...): ... function, and then call it from optim.minimize(model=create_model,... like in the example.

The reason for this is that hyperas works by doing template replacement of everything in the {{...}} into a separate temporary file, and then running the model with the replaced braces (think jinja templating).

This is the basis of how hyperas simplifies usage of hyperopt by being a "very simple wrapper".

TypeError: 'generator' object is not subscriptable

This is currently a known issue.

Just pip install networkx==1.11

NameError: global name 'X_train' is not defined

Maybe you forgot to return the x_train argument in the def create_model(x_train...) call from the def data(): ... function.

You are not restricted to the same list of arguments as in the example. Any arguments you return from data() will be passed to create_model()

notebook adjustment

If you find error like "No such file or directory" or OSError, Err22, you may need add notebook_name='simple_notebook'(assume your current notebook name is simple_notebook) in optim.minimize function like this:

best_run, best_model = optim.minimize(model=model,
                                      data=data,
                                      algo=tpe.suggest,
                                      max_evals=5,
                                      trials=Trials(),
                                      notebook_name='simple_notebook')

How does hyperas work?

All we do is parse the data and model templates and translate them into proper hyperopt by reconstructing the space object that's then passed to fmin. Most of the relevant code is found in optim.py and utils.py.

How to read the output of a hyperas model?

Hyperas translates your script into hyperopt compliant code, see here for some guidance on how to interpret the result.

How to pass arguments to data?

Suppose you want your data function take an argument, specify it like this using positional arguments only (not keyword arguments):

import pickle
def data(fname):
    with open(fname,'rb') as fh:
        return pickle.load(fh)

Note that your arguments must be implemented such that repr can show them in their entirety (such as strings and numbers). If you want more complex objects, use the passed arguments to build them inside the data function.

And when you run your trials, pass a tuple of arguments to be substituted in as data_args:

best_run, best_model = optim.minimize(
    model=model,
    data=data,
    algo=tpe.suggest,
    max_evals=64,
    trials=Trials(),
    data_args=('my_file.pkl',)
)

What if I need more flexibility loading data and adapting my model?

Hyperas is a convenience wrapper around Hyperopt that has some limitations. If it's not convenient to use in your situation, simply don't use it -- and choose Hyperopt instead. All you can do with Hyperas you can also do with Hyperopt, it's just a different way of defining your model. If you want to squeeze some flexibility out of Hyperas anyway, take a look here.

Running hyperas in parallel?

You can use hyperas to run multiple models in parallel with the use of mongodb (which you'll need to install and setup users for). Here's a short example using MNIST:

  1. Copy and modify examples/mnist_distributed.py (bump up max_evals if you like):

  2. Run python mnist_distributed.py. It will create a temp_model.py file. Copy this file to any machines that will be evaluating models. It will then begin waiting for evaluation results

  3. On your other machines (make sure they have a python installed with all your dependencies, ideally with the same versions) run:

    export PYTHONPATH=/path/to/temp_model.py
    hyperopt-mongo-worker --exp-key='mnist_test' --mongo='mongo://username:[email protected]:27017/jobs'
  4. Once max_evals have been completed, you should get an output with your best model. You can also look through your mongodb and examine the results, to get the best model out and run it, do:

    from pymongo import MongoClient
    from keras.models import load_model
    import tempfile
    c = MongoClient('mongodb://username:[email protected]:27017/jobs')
    best_model = c['jobs']['jobs'].find_one({'exp_key': 'mnist_test'}, sort=[('result.loss', -1)])
    temp_name = tempfile.gettempdir()+'/'+next(tempfile._get_candidate_names()) + '.h5'
    with open(temp_name, 'wb') as outfile:
        outfile.write(best_model['result']['model_serial'])
    model = load_model(temp_name)
Owner
Max Pumperla
Data Science Professor, Data Scientist & Engineer. DL4J core developer, Hyperopt maintainer, Keras contributor. Author of "Deep Learning and the Game of Go"
Max Pumperla
PyTorch Implementation of our paper Explain Me the Painting: Multi-Topic Knowledgeable Art Description Generation

PyTorch Implementation of our paper Explain Me the Painting: Multi-Topic Knowledgeable Art Description Generation

Zechen Bai 12 Jul 08, 2022
TensorFlow implementation of ENet

TensorFlow-ENet TensorFlow implementation of ENet: A Deep Neural Network Architecture for Real-Time Semantic Segmentation. This model was tested on th

Kwotsin 255 Oct 17, 2022
Python Algorithm Interview Book Review

파이썬 알고리즘 인터뷰 책 리뷰 리뷰 IT 대기업에 들어가고 싶은 목표가 있다. 내가 꿈꿔온 회사에서 일하는 사람들의 모습을 보면 멋있다고 생각이 들고 나의 목표에 대한 열망이 강해지는 것 같다. 미래의 핵심 사업 중 하나인 SW 부분을 이끌고 발전시키는 우리나라의 I

SharkBSJ 1 Dec 14, 2021
Image Captioning using CNN and Transformers

Image-Captioning Keras/Tensorflow Image Captioning application using CNN and Transformer as encoder/decoder. In particulary, the architecture consists

24 Dec 28, 2022
Repo for FUZE project. I will also publish some Linux kernel LPE exploits for various real world kernel vulnerabilities here. the samples are uploaded for education purposes for red and blue teams.

Linux_kernel_exploits Some Linux kernel exploits for various real world kernel vulnerabilities here. More exploits are yet to come. This repo contains

Wei Wu 472 Dec 21, 2022
🏖 Keras Implementation of Painting outside the box

Keras implementation of Image OutPainting This is an implementation of Painting Outside the Box: Image Outpainting paper from Standford University. So

Bendang 1.1k Dec 10, 2022
PyTorch implementation of CDistNet: Perceiving Multi-Domain Character Distance for Robust Text Recognition

PyTorch implementation of CDistNet: Perceiving Multi-Domain Character Distance for Robust Text Recognition The unofficial code of CDistNet. Now, we ha

25 Jul 20, 2022
Generative Exploration and Exploitation - This is an improved version of GENE.

GENE This is an improved version of GENE. In the original version, the states are generated from the decoder of VAE. We have to check whether the gere

33 Mar 23, 2022
Segmentation-Aware Convolutional Networks Using Local Attention Masks

Segmentation-Aware Convolutional Networks Using Local Attention Masks [Project Page] [Paper] Segmentation-aware convolution filters are invariant to b

144 Jun 29, 2022
《Dual-Resolution Correspondence Network》(NeurIPS 2020)

Dual-Resolution Correspondence Network Dual-Resolution Correspondence Network, NeurIPS 2020 Dependency All dependencies are included in asset/dualrcne

Active Vision Laboratory 45 Nov 21, 2022
This is the code of paper ``Contrastive Coding for Active Learning under Class Distribution Mismatch'' with python.

Contrastive Coding for Active Learning under Class Distribution Mismatch Official PyTorch implementation of ["Contrastive Coding for Active Learning u

21 Dec 22, 2022
Distilling Motion Planner Augmented Policies into Visual Control Policies for Robot Manipulation (CoRL 2021)

Distilling Motion Planner Augmented Policies into Visual Control Policies for Robot Manipulation [Project website] [Paper] This project is a PyTorch i

Cognitive Learning for Vision and Robotics (CLVR) lab @ USC 6 Feb 28, 2022
Any-to-any voice conversion using synthetic specific-speaker speeches as intermedium features

MediumVC MediumVC is an utterance-level method towards any-to-any VC. Before that, we propose SingleVC to perform A2O tasks(Xi → Ŷi) , Xi means utter

谷下雨 47 Dec 25, 2022
The software associated with a paper accepted at EMNLP 2021 titled "Open Knowledge Graphs Canonicalization using Variational Autoencoders".

Open-KG-canonicalization The software associated with a paper accepted at EMNLP 2021 titled "Open Knowledge Graphs Canonicalization using Variational

International Business Machines 13 Nov 11, 2022
Unofficial implementation of Proxy Anchor Loss for Deep Metric Learning

Proxy Anchor Loss for Deep Metric Learning Unofficial pytorch, tensorflow and mxnet implementations of Proxy Anchor Loss for Deep Metric Learning. Not

Geonmo Gu 3 Jun 09, 2021
Dashboard for the COVID19 spread

COVID-19 Data Explorer App A streamlit Dashboard for the COVID-19 spread. The app is live at: [https://covid19.cwerner.ai]. New data is queried from G

Christian Werner 22 Sep 29, 2022
Keeping it safe - AI Based COVID-19 Tracker using Deep Learning and facial recognition

Keeping it safe - AI Based COVID-19 Tracker using Deep Learning and facial recognition

Vansh Wassan 15 Jun 17, 2021
YOLOX is a high-performance anchor-free YOLO, exceeding yolov3~v5 with ONNX, TensorRT, ncnn, and OpenVINO supported.

Introduction YOLOX is an anchor-free version of YOLO, with a simpler design but better performance! It aims to bridge the gap between research and ind

7.7k Jan 03, 2023
AgeGuesser: deep learning based age estimation system. Powered by EfficientNet and Yolov5

AgeGuesser AgeGuesser is an end-to-end, deep-learning based Age Estimation system, presented at the CAIP 2021 conference. You can find the related pap

5 Nov 10, 2022
Numerical Methods with Python, Numpy and Matplotlib

Numerical Bric-a-Brac Collections of numerical techniques with Python and standard computational packages (Numpy, SciPy, Numba, Matplotlib ...). Diffe

Vincent Bonnet 10 Dec 20, 2021