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Multiclass sparse logisitic regression on newgroups20

Comparison of multinomial logistic L1 vs one-versus-rest L1 logistic regression to classify documents from the newgroups20 dataset. Multinomial logistic regression yields more accurate results and is faster to train on the larger scale dataset.

Here we use the l1 sparsity that trims the weights of not informative features to zero. This is good if the goal is to extract the strongly discriminative vocabulary of each class. If the goal is to get the best predictive accuracy, it is better to use the non sparsity-inducing l2 penalty instead.

A more traditional (and possibly better) way to predict on a sparse subset of input features would be to use univariate feature selection followed by a traditional (l2-penalised) logistic regression model.

../../_images/sphx_glr_plot_sparse_logistic_regression_20newsgroups_001.png

Out:

Dataset 20newsgroup, train_samples=9000, n_features=130107, n_classes=20
[model=One versus Rest, solver=saga] Number of epochs: 1
[model=One versus Rest, solver=saga] Number of epochs: 3
Test accuracy for model ovr: 0.7410
% non-zero coefficients for model ovr, per class:
 [0.27054655 0.66330021 0.80395367 0.73247404 0.67713497 0.73477984
 0.40889422 0.48959702 1.01301237 0.56261385 0.60104376 0.332803
 0.7094161  0.85083816 0.56876263 0.65715142 0.64408525 0.81163965
 0.44271254 0.41120001]
Run time (3 epochs) for model ovr:3.41
[model=Multinomial, solver=saga] Number of epochs: 1
[model=Multinomial, solver=saga] Number of epochs: 3
[model=Multinomial, solver=saga] Number of epochs: 7
Test accuracy for model multinomial: 0.7450
% non-zero coefficients for model multinomial, per class:
 [0.13296748 0.11759552 0.13296748 0.13988486 0.1268187  0.16140561
 0.15218243 0.09069458 0.07762841 0.12143851 0.14910804 0.10837234
 0.18830655 0.1245129  0.168323   0.21828188 0.11605832 0.07839701
 0.06917383 0.15602543]
Run time (7 epochs) for model multinomial:5.79
Example run in 20.227 s
import time

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

from sklearn.datasets import fetch_20newsgroups_vectorized
from sklearn.linear_model import LogisticRegression
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split

print(__doc__)
# Author: Arthur Mensch

t0 = time.clock()

# We use SAGA solver
solver = 'saga'

# Turn down for faster run time
n_samples = 10000

# Memorized fetch_rcv1 for faster access
dataset = fetch_20newsgroups_vectorized('all')
X = dataset.data
y = dataset.target
X = X[:n_samples]
y = y[:n_samples]

X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(X, y,
                                                    random_state=42,
                                                    stratify=y,
                                                    test_size=0.1)
train_samples, n_features = X_train.shape
n_classes = np.unique(y).shape[0]

print('Dataset 20newsgroup, train_samples=%i, n_features=%i, n_classes=%i'
      % (train_samples, n_features, n_classes))

models = {'ovr': {'name': 'One versus Rest', 'iters': [1, 3]},
          'multinomial': {'name': 'Multinomial', 'iters': [1, 3, 7]}}

for model in models:
    # Add initial chance-level values for plotting purpose
    accuracies = [1 / n_classes]
    times = [0]
    densities = [1]

    model_params = models[model]

    # Small number of epochs for fast runtime
    for this_max_iter in model_params['iters']:
        print('[model=%s, solver=%s] Number of epochs: %s' %
              (model_params['name'], solver, this_max_iter))
        lr = LogisticRegression(solver=solver,
                                multi_class=model,
                                C=1,
                                penalty='l1',
                                fit_intercept=True,
                                max_iter=this_max_iter,
                                random_state=42,
                                )
        t1 = time.clock()
        lr.fit(X_train, y_train)
        train_time = time.clock() - t1

        y_pred = lr.predict(X_test)
        accuracy = np.sum(y_pred == y_test) / y_test.shape[0]
        density = np.mean(lr.coef_ != 0, axis=1) * 100
        accuracies.append(accuracy)
        densities.append(density)
        times.append(train_time)
    models[model]['times'] = times
    models[model]['densities'] = densities
    models[model]['accuracies'] = accuracies
    print('Test accuracy for model %s: %.4f' % (model, accuracies[-1]))
    print('%% non-zero coefficients for model %s, '
          'per class:\n %s' % (model, densities[-1]))
    print('Run time (%i epochs) for model %s:'
          '%.2f' % (model_params['iters'][-1], model, times[-1]))

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)

for model in models:
    name = models[model]['name']
    times = models[model]['times']
    accuracies = models[model]['accuracies']
    ax.plot(times, accuracies, marker='o',
            label='Model: %s' % name)
    ax.set_xlabel('Train time (s)')
    ax.set_ylabel('Test accuracy')
ax.legend()
fig.suptitle('Multinomial vs One-vs-Rest Logistic L1\n'
             'Dataset %s' % '20newsgroups')
fig.tight_layout()
fig.subplots_adjust(top=0.85)
run_time = time.clock() - t0
print('Example run in %.3f s' % run_time)
plt.show()

Total running time of the script: ( 0 minutes 12.132 seconds)

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Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
http://scikit-learn.org/stable/auto_examples/linear_model/plot_sparse_logistic_regression_20newsgroups.html