Batch Normalization layer from (Ioffe et al., 2015).
Inherits From: BatchNormalization
, Layer
, Layer
, Module
tf.compat.v1.layers.BatchNormalization( axis=-1, momentum=0.99, epsilon=0.001, center=True, scale=True, beta_initializer=tf.zeros_initializer(), gamma_initializer=tf.ones_initializer(), moving_mean_initializer=tf.zeros_initializer(), moving_variance_initializer=tf.ones_initializer(), beta_regularizer=None, gamma_regularizer=None, beta_constraint=None, gamma_constraint=None, renorm=False, renorm_clipping=None, renorm_momentum=0.99, fused=None, trainable=True, virtual_batch_size=None, adjustment=None, name=None, **kwargs )
Keras APIs handle BatchNormalization updates to the moving_mean and moving_variance as part of their fit()
and evaluate()
loops. However, if a custom training loop is used with an instance of Model
, these updates need to be explicitly included. Here's a simple example of how it can be done:
# model is an instance of Model that contains BatchNormalization layer. update_ops = model.get_updates_for(None) + model.get_updates_for(features) train_op = optimizer.minimize(loss) train_op = tf.group([train_op, update_ops])
Arguments | |
---|---|
axis | An int or list of int , the axis or axes that should be normalized, typically the features axis/axes. For instance, after a Conv2D layer with data_format="channels_first" , set axis=1 . If a list of axes is provided, each axis in axis will be normalized simultaneously. Default is -1 which uses the last axis. Note: when using multi-axis batch norm, the beta , gamma , moving_mean , and moving_variance variables are the same rank as the input Tensor, with dimension size 1 in all reduced (non-axis) dimensions). |
momentum | Momentum for the moving average. |
epsilon | Small float added to variance to avoid dividing by zero. |
center | If True, add offset of beta to normalized tensor. If False, beta is ignored. |
scale | If True, multiply by gamma . If False, gamma is not used. When the next layer is linear (also e.g. nn.relu ), this can be disabled since the scaling can be done by the next layer. |
beta_initializer | Initializer for the beta weight. |
gamma_initializer | Initializer for the gamma weight. |
moving_mean_initializer | Initializer for the moving mean. |
moving_variance_initializer | Initializer for the moving variance. |
beta_regularizer | Optional regularizer for the beta weight. |
gamma_regularizer | Optional regularizer for the gamma weight. |
beta_constraint | An optional projection function to be applied to the beta weight after being updated by an Optimizer (e.g. used to implement norm constraints or value constraints for layer weights). The function must take as input the unprojected variable and must return the projected variable (which must have the same shape). Constraints are not safe to use when doing asynchronous distributed training. |
gamma_constraint | An optional projection function to be applied to the gamma weight after being updated by an Optimizer . |
renorm | Whether to use Batch Renormalization (Ioffe, 2017). This adds extra variables during training. The inference is the same for either value of this parameter. |
renorm_clipping | A dictionary that may map keys 'rmax', 'rmin', 'dmax' to scalar Tensors used to clip the renorm correction. The correction (r, d) is used as corrected_value = normalized_value * r + d , with r clipped to [rmin, rmax], and d to [-dmax, dmax]. Missing rmax, rmin, dmax are set to inf, 0, inf, respectively. |
renorm_momentum | Momentum used to update the moving means and standard deviations with renorm. Unlike momentum , this affects training and should be neither too small (which would add noise) nor too large (which would give stale estimates). Note that momentum is still applied to get the means and variances for inference. |
fused | if None or True , use a faster, fused implementation if possible. If False , use the system recommended implementation. |
trainable | Boolean, if True also add variables to the graph collection GraphKeys.TRAINABLE_VARIABLES (see tf.Variable). |
virtual_batch_size | An int . By default, virtual_batch_size is None , which means batch normalization is performed across the whole batch. When virtual_batch_size is not None , instead perform "Ghost Batch Normalization", which creates virtual sub-batches which are each normalized separately (with shared gamma, beta, and moving statistics). Must divide the actual batch size during execution. |
adjustment | A function taking the Tensor containing the (dynamic) shape of the input tensor and returning a pair (scale, bias) to apply to the normalized values (before gamma and beta), only during training. For example, if axis==-1, adjustment = lambda shape: ( tf.random.uniform(shape[-1:], 0.93, 1.07), tf.random.uniform(shape[-1:], -0.1, 0.1)) will scale the normalized value by up to 7% up or down, then shift the result by up to 0.1 (with independent scaling and bias for each feature but shared across all examples), and finally apply gamma and/or beta. If None , no adjustment is applied. Cannot be specified if virtual_batch_size is specified. |
name | A string, the name of the layer. |
Batch Normalization - Accelerating Deep Network Training by Reducing Internal Covariate Shift: Ioffe et al., 2015 (pdf) Batch Renormalization - Towards Reducing Minibatch Dependence in Batch-Normalized Models: Ioffe, 2017 (pdf)
Attributes | |
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graph | |
scope_name |
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0.
Code samples licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
https://www.tensorflow.org/versions/r2.4/api_docs/python/tf/compat/v1/layers/BatchNormalization