# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """ Domain adaptation with optimal transport """ # Author: Remi Flamary # Nicolas Courty # Michael Perrot # Nathalie Gayraud # # License: MIT License import numpy as np import scipy.linalg as linalg from .bregman import sinkhorn from .lp import emd from .utils import unif, dist, kernel, cost_normalization from .utils import check_params, BaseEstimator from .unbalanced import sinkhorn_unbalanced from .optim import cg from .optim import gcg def sinkhorn_lpl1_mm(a, labels_a, b, M, reg, eta=0.1, numItermax=10, numInnerItermax=200, stopInnerThr=1e-9, verbose=False, log=False): """ Solve the entropic regularization optimal transport problem with nonconvex group lasso regularization The function solves the following optimization problem: .. math:: \gamma = arg\min_\gamma <\gamma,M>_F + reg\cdot\Omega_e(\gamma) + \eta \Omega_g(\gamma) s.t. \gamma 1 = a \gamma^T 1= b \gamma\geq 0 where : - M is the (ns,nt) metric cost matrix - :math:`\Omega_e` is the entropic regularization term :math:`\Omega_e (\gamma)=\sum_{i,j} \gamma_{i,j}\log(\gamma_{i,j})` - :math:`\Omega_g` is the group lasso regularization term :math:`\Omega_g(\gamma)=\sum_{i,c} \|\gamma_{i,\mathcal{I}_c}\|^{1/2}_1` where :math:`\mathcal{I}_c` are the index of samples from class c in the source domain. - a and b are source and target weights (sum to 1) The algorithm used for solving the problem is the generalized conditional gradient as proposed in [5]_ [7]_ Parameters ---------- a : np.ndarray (ns,) samples weights in the source domain labels_a : np.ndarray (ns,) labels of samples in the source domain b : np.ndarray (nt,) samples weights in the target domain M : np.ndarray (ns,nt) loss matrix reg : float Regularization term for entropic regularization >0 eta : float, optional Regularization term for group lasso regularization >0 numItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations numInnerItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations (inner sinkhorn solver) stopInnerThr : float, optional Stop threshold on error (inner sinkhorn solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional Print information along iterations log : bool, optional record log if True Returns ------- gamma : (ns x nt) ndarray Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters log : dict log dictionary return only if log==True in parameters References ---------- .. [5] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 .. [7] Rakotomamonjy, A., Flamary, R., & Courty, N. (2015). Generalized conditional gradient: analysis of convergence and applications. arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.06567. See Also -------- ot.lp.emd : Unregularized OT ot.bregman.sinkhorn : Entropic regularized OT ot.optim.cg : General regularized OT """ p = 0.5 epsilon = 1e-3 indices_labels = [] classes = np.unique(labels_a) for c in classes: idxc, = np.where(labels_a == c) indices_labels.append(idxc) W = np.zeros(M.shape) for cpt in range(numItermax): Mreg = M + eta * W transp = sinkhorn(a, b, Mreg, reg, numItermax=numInnerItermax, stopThr=stopInnerThr) # the transport has been computed. Check if classes are really # separated W = np.ones(M.shape) for (i, c) in enumerate(classes): majs = np.sum(transp[indices_labels[i]], axis=0) majs = p * ((majs + epsilon)**(p - 1)) W[indices_labels[i]] = majs return transp def sinkhorn_l1l2_gl(a, labels_a, b, M, reg, eta=0.1, numItermax=10, numInnerItermax=200, stopInnerThr=1e-9, verbose=False, log=False): """ Solve the entropic regularization optimal transport problem with group lasso regularization The function solves the following optimization problem: .. math:: \gamma = arg\min_\gamma <\gamma,M>_F + reg\cdot\Omega_e(\gamma)+ \eta \Omega_g(\gamma) s.t. \gamma 1 = a \gamma^T 1= b \gamma\geq 0 where : - M is the (ns,nt) metric cost matrix - :math:`\Omega_e` is the entropic regularization term :math:`\Omega_e(\gamma)=\sum_{i,j} \gamma_{i,j}\log(\gamma_{i,j})` - :math:`\Omega_g` is the group lasso regulaization term :math:`\Omega_g(\gamma)=\sum_{i,c} \|\gamma_{i,\mathcal{I}_c}\|^2` where :math:`\mathcal{I}_c` are the index of samples from class c in the source domain. - a and b are source and target weights (sum to 1) The algorithm used for solving the problem is the generalised conditional gradient as proposed in [5]_ [7]_ Parameters ---------- a : np.ndarray (ns,) samples weights in the source domain labels_a : np.ndarray (ns,) labels of samples in the source domain b : np.ndarray (nt,) samples in the target domain M : np.ndarray (ns,nt) loss matrix reg : float Regularization term for entropic regularization >0 eta : float, optional Regularization term for group lasso regularization >0 numItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations numInnerItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations (inner sinkhorn solver) stopInnerThr : float, optional Stop threshold on error (inner sinkhorn solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional Print information along iterations log : bool, optional record log if True Returns ------- gamma : (ns x nt) ndarray Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters log : dict log dictionary return only if log==True in parameters References ---------- .. [5] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 .. [7] Rakotomamonjy, A., Flamary, R., & Courty, N. (2015). Generalized conditional gradient: analysis of convergence and applications. arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.06567. See Also -------- ot.optim.gcg : Generalized conditional gradient for OT problems """ lstlab = np.unique(labels_a) def f(G): res = 0 for i in range(G.shape[1]): for lab in lstlab: temp = G[labels_a == lab, i] res += np.linalg.norm(temp) return res def df(G): W = np.zeros(G.shape) for i in range(G.shape[1]): for lab in lstlab: temp = G[labels_a == lab, i] n = np.linalg.norm(temp) if n: W[labels_a == lab, i] = temp / n return W return gcg(a, b, M, reg, eta, f, df, G0=None, numItermax=numItermax, numInnerItermax=numInnerItermax, stopThr=stopInnerThr, verbose=verbose, log=log) def joint_OT_mapping_linear(xs, xt, mu=1, eta=0.001, bias=False, verbose=False, verbose2=False, numItermax=100, numInnerItermax=10, stopInnerThr=1e-6, stopThr=1e-5, log=False, **kwargs): """Joint OT and linear mapping estimation as proposed in [8] The function solves the following optimization problem: .. math:: \min_{\gamma,L}\quad \|L(X_s) -n_s\gamma X_t\|^2_F + \mu<\gamma,M>_F + \eta \|L -I\|^2_F s.t. \gamma 1 = a \gamma^T 1= b \gamma\geq 0 where : - M is the (ns,nt) squared euclidean cost matrix between samples in Xs and Xt (scaled by ns) - :math:`L` is a dxd linear operator that approximates the barycentric mapping - :math:`I` is the identity matrix (neutral linear mapping) - a and b are uniform source and target weights The problem consist in solving jointly an optimal transport matrix :math:`\gamma` and a linear mapping that fits the barycentric mapping :math:`n_s\gamma X_t`. One can also estimate a mapping with constant bias (see supplementary material of [8]) using the bias optional argument. The algorithm used for solving the problem is the block coordinate descent that alternates between updates of G (using conditionnal gradient) and the update of L using a classical least square solver. Parameters ---------- xs : np.ndarray (ns,d) samples in the source domain xt : np.ndarray (nt,d) samples in the target domain mu : float,optional Weight for the linear OT loss (>0) eta : float, optional Regularization term for the linear mapping L (>0) bias : bool,optional Estimate linear mapping with constant bias numItermax : int, optional Max number of BCD iterations stopThr : float, optional Stop threshold on relative loss decrease (>0) numInnerItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations (inner CG solver) stopInnerThr : float, optional Stop threshold on error (inner CG solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional Print information along iterations log : bool, optional record log if True Returns ------- gamma : (ns x nt) ndarray Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters L : (d x d) ndarray Linear mapping matrix (d+1 x d if bias) log : dict log dictionary return only if log==True in parameters References ---------- .. [8] M. Perrot, N. Courty, R. Flamary, A. Habrard, "Mapping estimation for discrete optimal transport", Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS), 2016. See Also -------- ot.lp.emd : Unregularized OT ot.optim.cg : General regularized OT """ ns, nt, d = xs.shape[0], xt.shape[0], xt.shape[1] if bias: xs1 = np.hstack((xs, np.ones((ns, 1)))) xstxs = xs1.T.dot(xs1) Id = np.eye(d + 1) Id[-1] = 0 I0 = Id[:, :-1] def sel(x): return x[:-1, :] else: xs1 = xs xstxs = xs1.T.dot(xs1) Id = np.eye(d) I0 = Id def sel(x): return x if log: log = {'err': []} a, b = unif(ns), unif(nt) M = dist(xs, xt) * ns G = emd(a, b, M) vloss = [] def loss(L, G): """Compute full loss""" return np.sum((xs1.dot(L) - ns * G.dot(xt))**2) + mu * \ np.sum(G * M) + eta * np.sum(sel(L - I0)**2) def solve_L(G): """ solve L problem with fixed G (least square)""" xst = ns * G.dot(xt) return np.linalg.solve(xstxs + eta * Id, xs1.T.dot(xst) + eta * I0) def solve_G(L, G0): """Update G with CG algorithm""" xsi = xs1.dot(L) def f(G): return np.sum((xsi - ns * G.dot(xt))**2) def df(G): return -2 * ns * (xsi - ns * G.dot(xt)).dot(xt.T) G = cg(a, b, M, 1.0 / mu, f, df, G0=G0, numItermax=numInnerItermax, stopThr=stopInnerThr) return G L = solve_L(G) vloss.append(loss(L, G)) if verbose: print('{:5s}|{:12s}|{:8s}'.format( 'It.', 'Loss', 'Delta loss') + '\n' + '-' * 32) print('{:5d}|{:8e}|{:8e}'.format(0, vloss[-1], 0)) # init loop if numItermax > 0: loop = 1 else: loop = 0 it = 0 while loop: it += 1 # update G G = solve_G(L, G) # update L L = solve_L(G) vloss.append(loss(L, G)) if it >= numItermax: loop = 0 if abs(vloss[-1] - vloss[-2]) / abs(vloss[-2]) < stopThr: loop = 0 if verbose: if it % 20 == 0: print('{:5s}|{:12s}|{:8s}'.format( 'It.', 'Loss', 'Delta loss') + '\n' + '-' * 32) print('{:5d}|{:8e}|{:8e}'.format( it, vloss[-1], (vloss[-1] - vloss[-2]) / abs(vloss[-2]))) if log: log['loss'] = vloss return G, L, log else: return G, L def joint_OT_mapping_kernel(xs, xt, mu=1, eta=0.001, kerneltype='gaussian', sigma=1, bias=False, verbose=False, verbose2=False, numItermax=100, numInnerItermax=10, stopInnerThr=1e-6, stopThr=1e-5, log=False, **kwargs): """Joint OT and nonlinear mapping estimation with kernels as proposed in [8] The function solves the following optimization problem: .. math:: \min_{\gamma,L\in\mathcal{H}}\quad \|L(X_s) - n_s\gamma X_t\|^2_F + \mu<\gamma,M>_F + \eta \|L\|^2_\mathcal{H} s.t. \gamma 1 = a \gamma^T 1= b \gamma\geq 0 where : - M is the (ns,nt) squared euclidean cost matrix between samples in Xs and Xt (scaled by ns) - :math:`L` is a ns x d linear operator on a kernel matrix that approximates the barycentric mapping - a and b are uniform source and target weights The problem consist in solving jointly an optimal transport matrix :math:`\gamma` and the nonlinear mapping that fits the barycentric mapping :math:`n_s\gamma X_t`. One can also estimate a mapping with constant bias (see supplementary material of [8]) using the bias optional argument. The algorithm used for solving the problem is the block coordinate descent that alternates between updates of G (using conditionnal gradient) and the update of L using a classical kernel least square solver. Parameters ---------- xs : np.ndarray (ns,d) samples in the source domain xt : np.ndarray (nt,d) samples in the target domain mu : float,optional Weight for the linear OT loss (>0) eta : float, optional Regularization term for the linear mapping L (>0) kerneltype : str,optional kernel used by calling function ot.utils.kernel (gaussian by default) sigma : float, optional Gaussian kernel bandwidth. bias : bool,optional Estimate linear mapping with constant bias verbose : bool, optional Print information along iterations verbose2 : bool, optional Print information along iterations numItermax : int, optional Max number of BCD iterations numInnerItermax : int, optional Max number of iterations (inner CG solver) stopInnerThr : float, optional Stop threshold on error (inner CG solver) (>0) stopThr : float, optional Stop threshold on relative loss decrease (>0) log : bool, optional record log if True Returns ------- gamma : (ns x nt) ndarray Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters L : (ns x d) ndarray Nonlinear mapping matrix (ns+1 x d if bias) log : dict log dictionary return only if log==True in parameters References ---------- .. [8] M. Perrot, N. Courty, R. Flamary, A. Habrard, "Mapping estimation for discrete optimal transport", Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS), 2016. See Also -------- ot.lp.emd : Unregularized OT ot.optim.cg : General regularized OT """ ns, nt = xs.shape[0], xt.shape[0] K = kernel(xs, xs, method=kerneltype, sigma=sigma) if bias: K1 = np.hstack((K, np.ones((ns, 1)))) Id = np.eye(ns + 1) Id[-1] = 0 Kp = np.eye(ns + 1) Kp[:ns, :ns] = K # ls regu # K0 = K1.T.dot(K1)+eta*I # Kreg=I # RKHS regul K0 = K1.T.dot(K1) + eta * Kp Kreg = Kp else: K1 = K Id = np.eye(ns) # ls regul # K0 = K1.T.dot(K1)+eta*I # Kreg=I # proper kernel ridge K0 = K + eta * Id Kreg = K if log: log = {'err': []} a, b = unif(ns), unif(nt) M = dist(xs, xt) * ns G = emd(a, b, M) vloss = [] def loss(L, G): """Compute full loss""" return np.sum((K1.dot(L) - ns * G.dot(xt))**2) + mu * \ np.sum(G * M) + eta * np.trace(L.T.dot(Kreg).dot(L)) def solve_L_nobias(G): """ solve L problem with fixed G (least square)""" xst = ns * G.dot(xt) return np.linalg.solve(K0, xst) def solve_L_bias(G): """ solve L problem with fixed G (least square)""" xst = ns * G.dot(xt) return np.linalg.solve(K0, K1.T.dot(xst)) def solve_G(L, G0): """Update G with CG algorithm""" xsi = K1.dot(L) def f(G): return np.sum((xsi - ns * G.dot(xt))**2) def df(G): return -2 * ns * (xsi - ns * G.dot(xt)).dot(xt.T) G = cg(a, b, M, 1.0 / mu, f, df, G0=G0, numItermax=numInnerItermax, stopThr=stopInnerThr) return G if bias: solve_L = solve_L_bias else: solve_L = solve_L_nobias L = solve_L(G) vloss.append(loss(L, G)) if verbose: print('{:5s}|{:12s}|{:8s}'.format( 'It.', 'Loss', 'Delta loss') + '\n' + '-' * 32) print('{:5d}|{:8e}|{:8e}'.format(0, vloss[-1], 0)) # init loop if numItermax > 0: loop = 1 else: loop = 0 it = 0 while loop: it += 1 # update G G = solve_G(L, G) # update L L = solve_L(G) vloss.append(loss(L, G)) if it >= numItermax: loop = 0 if abs(vloss[-1] - vloss[-2]) / abs(vloss[-2]) < stopThr: loop = 0 if verbose: if it % 20 == 0: print('{:5s}|{:12s}|{:8s}'.format( 'It.', 'Loss', 'Delta loss') + '\n' + '-' * 32) print('{:5d}|{:8e}|{:8e}'.format( it, vloss[-1], (vloss[-1] - vloss[-2]) / abs(vloss[-2]))) if log: log['loss'] = vloss return G, L, log else: return G, L def OT_mapping_linear(xs, xt, reg=1e-6, ws=None, wt=None, bias=True, log=False): """ return OT linear operator between samples The function estimates the optimal linear operator that aligns the two empirical distributions. This is equivalent to estimating the closed form mapping between two Gaussian distributions :math:`N(\mu_s,\Sigma_s)` and :math:`N(\mu_t,\Sigma_t)` as proposed in [14] and discussed in remark 2.29 in [15]. The linear operator from source to target :math:`M` .. math:: M(x)=Ax+b where : .. math:: A=\Sigma_s^{-1/2}(\Sigma_s^{1/2}\Sigma_t\Sigma_s^{1/2})^{1/2} \Sigma_s^{-1/2} .. math:: b=\mu_t-A\mu_s Parameters ---------- xs : np.ndarray (ns,d) samples in the source domain xt : np.ndarray (nt,d) samples in the target domain reg : float,optional regularization added to the diagonals of convariances (>0) ws : np.ndarray (ns,1), optional weights for the source samples wt : np.ndarray (ns,1), optional weights for the target samples bias: boolean, optional estimate bias b else b=0 (default:True) log : bool, optional record log if True Returns ------- A : (d x d) ndarray Linear operator b : (1 x d) ndarray bias log : dict log dictionary return only if log==True in parameters References ---------- .. [14] Knott, M. and Smith, C. S. "On the optimal mapping of distributions", Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications Vol 43, 1984 .. [15] Peyré, G., & Cuturi, M. (2017). "Computational Optimal Transport", 2018. """ d = xs.shape[1] if bias: mxs = xs.mean(0, keepdims=True) mxt = xt.mean(0, keepdims=True) xs = xs - mxs xt = xt - mxt else: mxs = np.zeros((1, d)) mxt = np.zeros((1, d)) if ws is None: ws = np.ones((xs.shape[0], 1)) / xs.shape[0] if wt is None: wt = np.ones((xt.shape[0], 1)) / xt.shape[0] Cs = (xs * ws).T.dot(xs) / ws.sum() + reg * np.eye(d) Ct = (xt * wt).T.dot(xt) / wt.sum() + reg * np.eye(d) Cs12 = linalg.sqrtm(Cs) Cs_12 = linalg.inv(Cs12) M0 = linalg.sqrtm(Cs12.dot(Ct.dot(Cs12))) A = Cs_12.dot(M0.dot(Cs_12)) b = mxt - mxs.dot(A) if log: log = {} log['Cs'] = Cs log['Ct'] = Ct log['Cs12'] = Cs12 log['Cs_12'] = Cs_12 return A, b, log else: return A, b def distribution_estimation_uniform(X): """estimates a uniform distribution from an array of samples X Parameters ---------- X : array-like, shape (n_samples, n_features) The array of samples Returns ------- mu : array-like, shape (n_samples,) The uniform distribution estimated from X """ return unif(X.shape[0]) class BaseTransport(BaseEstimator): """Base class for OTDA objects Notes ----- All estimators should specify all the parameters that can be set at the class level in their ``__init__`` as explicit keyword arguments (no ``*args`` or ``**kwargs``). fit method should: - estimate a cost matrix and store it in a `cost_` attribute - estimate a coupling matrix and store it in a `coupling_` attribute - estimate distributions from source and target data and store them in mu_s and mu_t attributes - store Xs and Xt in attributes to be used later on in transform and inverse_transform methods transform method should always get as input a Xs parameter inverse_transform method should always get as input a Xt parameter """ def fit(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs, Xt=Xt): # pairwise distance self.cost_ = dist(Xs, Xt, metric=self.metric) self.cost_ = cost_normalization(self.cost_, self.norm) if (ys is not None) and (yt is not None): if self.limit_max != np.infty: self.limit_max = self.limit_max * np.max(self.cost_) # assumes labeled source samples occupy the first rows # and labeled target samples occupy the first columns classes = [c for c in np.unique(ys) if c != -1] for c in classes: idx_s = np.where((ys != c) & (ys != -1)) idx_t = np.where(yt == c) # all the coefficients corresponding to a source sample # and a target sample : # with different labels get a infinite for j in idx_t[0]: self.cost_[idx_s[0], j] = self.limit_max # distribution estimation self.mu_s = self.distribution_estimation(Xs) self.mu_t = self.distribution_estimation(Xt) # store arrays of samples self.xs_ = Xs self.xt_ = Xt return self def fit_transform(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) and transports source samples Xs onto target ones Xt Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- transp_Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The source samples samples. """ return self.fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt).transform(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) def transform(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None, batch_size=128): """Transports source samples Xs onto target ones Xt Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label batch_size : int, optional (default=128) The batch size for out of sample inverse transform Returns ------- transp_Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The transport source samples. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs): if np.array_equal(self.xs_, Xs): # perform standard barycentric mapping transp = self.coupling_ / np.sum(self.coupling_, 1)[:, None] # set nans to 0 transp[~ np.isfinite(transp)] = 0 # compute transported samples transp_Xs = np.dot(transp, self.xt_) else: # perform out of sample mapping indices = np.arange(Xs.shape[0]) batch_ind = [ indices[i:i + batch_size] for i in range(0, len(indices), batch_size)] transp_Xs = [] for bi in batch_ind: # get the nearest neighbor in the source domain D0 = dist(Xs[bi], self.xs_) idx = np.argmin(D0, axis=1) # transport the source samples transp = self.coupling_ / np.sum( self.coupling_, 1)[:, None] transp[~ np.isfinite(transp)] = 0 transp_Xs_ = np.dot(transp, self.xt_) # define the transported points transp_Xs_ = transp_Xs_[idx, :] + Xs[bi] - self.xs_[idx, :] transp_Xs.append(transp_Xs_) transp_Xs = np.concatenate(transp_Xs, axis=0) return transp_Xs def inverse_transform(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None, batch_size=128): """Transports target samples Xt onto target samples Xs Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label batch_size : int, optional (default=128) The batch size for out of sample inverse transform Returns ------- transp_Xt : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The transported target samples. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xt=Xt): if np.array_equal(self.xt_, Xt): # perform standard barycentric mapping transp_ = self.coupling_.T / np.sum(self.coupling_, 0)[:, None] # set nans to 0 transp_[~ np.isfinite(transp_)] = 0 # compute transported samples transp_Xt = np.dot(transp_, self.xs_) else: # perform out of sample mapping indices = np.arange(Xt.shape[0]) batch_ind = [ indices[i:i + batch_size] for i in range(0, len(indices), batch_size)] transp_Xt = [] for bi in batch_ind: D0 = dist(Xt[bi], self.xt_) idx = np.argmin(D0, axis=1) # transport the target samples transp_ = self.coupling_.T / np.sum( self.coupling_, 0)[:, None] transp_[~ np.isfinite(transp_)] = 0 transp_Xt_ = np.dot(transp_, self.xs_) # define the transported points transp_Xt_ = transp_Xt_[idx, :] + Xt[bi] - self.xt_[idx, :] transp_Xt.append(transp_Xt_) transp_Xt = np.concatenate(transp_Xt, axis=0) return transp_Xt class LinearTransport(BaseTransport): """ OT linear operator between empirical distributions The function estimates the optimal linear operator that aligns the two empirical distributions. This is equivalent to estimating the closed form mapping between two Gaussian distributions :math:`N(\mu_s,\Sigma_s)` and :math:`N(\mu_t,\Sigma_t)` as proposed in [14] and discussed in remark 2.29 in [15]. The linear operator from source to target :math:`M` .. math:: M(x)=Ax+b where : .. math:: A=\Sigma_s^{-1/2}(\Sigma_s^{1/2}\Sigma_t\Sigma_s^{1/2})^{1/2} \Sigma_s^{-1/2} .. math:: b=\mu_t-A\mu_s Parameters ---------- reg : float,optional regularization added to the daigonals of convariances (>0) bias: boolean, optional estimate bias b else b=0 (default:True) log : bool, optional record log if True References ---------- .. [14] Knott, M. and Smith, C. S. "On the optimal mapping of distributions", Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications Vol 43, 1984 .. [15] Peyré, G., & Cuturi, M. (2017). "Computational Optimal Transport", 2018. """ def __init__(self, reg=1e-8, bias=True, log=False, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform): self.bias = bias self.log = log self.reg = reg self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation def fit(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ self.mu_s = self.distribution_estimation(Xs) self.mu_t = self.distribution_estimation(Xt) # coupling estimation returned_ = OT_mapping_linear(Xs, Xt, reg=self.reg, ws=self.mu_s.reshape((-1, 1)), wt=self.mu_t.reshape((-1, 1)), bias=self.bias, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.A_, self.B_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.A_, self.B_, = returned_ self.log_ = dict() # re compute inverse mapping self.A1_ = linalg.inv(self.A_) self.B1_ = -self.B_.dot(self.A1_) return self def transform(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None, batch_size=128): """Transports source samples Xs onto target ones Xt Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label batch_size : int, optional (default=128) The batch size for out of sample inverse transform Returns ------- transp_Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The transport source samples. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs): transp_Xs = Xs.dot(self.A_) + self.B_ return transp_Xs def inverse_transform(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None, batch_size=128): """Transports target samples Xt onto target samples Xs Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label batch_size : int, optional (default=128) The batch size for out of sample inverse transform Returns ------- transp_Xt : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The transported target samples. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xt=Xt): transp_Xt = Xt.dot(self.A1_) + self.B1_ return transp_Xt class SinkhornTransport(BaseTransport): """Domain Adapatation OT method based on Sinkhorn Algorithm Parameters ---------- reg_e : float, optional (default=1) Entropic regularization parameter max_iter : int, float, optional (default=1000) The minimum number of iteration before stopping the optimization algorithm if no it has not converged tol : float, optional (default=10e-9) The precision required to stop the optimization algorithm. verbose : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the verbosity of the optimization algorithm log : int, optional (default=False) Controls the logs of the optimization algorithm metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. distribution_estimation : callable, optional (defaults to the uniform) The kind of distribution estimation to employ out_of_sample_map : string, optional (default="ferradans") The kind of out of sample mapping to apply to transport samples from a domain into another one. Currently the only possible option is "ferradans" which uses the method proposed in [6]. limit_max: float, optional (defaul=np.infty) Controls the semi supervised mode. Transport between labeled source and target samples of different classes will exhibit an cost defined by this variable Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling log_ : dictionary The dictionary of log, empty dic if parameter log is not True References ---------- .. [1] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 .. [2] M. Cuturi, Sinkhorn Distances : Lightspeed Computation of Optimal Transport, Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS) 26, 2013 """ def __init__(self, reg_e=1., max_iter=1000, tol=10e-9, verbose=False, log=False, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform, out_of_sample_map='ferradans', limit_max=np.infty): self.reg_e = reg_e self.max_iter = max_iter self.tol = tol self.verbose = verbose self.log = log self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.limit_max = limit_max self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation self.out_of_sample_map = out_of_sample_map def fit(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ super(SinkhornTransport, self).fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) # coupling estimation returned_ = sinkhorn( a=self.mu_s, b=self.mu_t, M=self.cost_, reg=self.reg_e, numItermax=self.max_iter, stopThr=self.tol, verbose=self.verbose, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.coupling_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self class EMDTransport(BaseTransport): """Domain Adapatation OT method based on Earth Mover's Distance Parameters ---------- metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. log : int, optional (default=False) Controls the logs of the optimization algorithm distribution_estimation : callable, optional (defaults to the uniform) The kind of distribution estimation to employ out_of_sample_map : string, optional (default="ferradans") The kind of out of sample mapping to apply to transport samples from a domain into another one. Currently the only possible option is "ferradans" which uses the method proposed in [6]. limit_max: float, optional (default=10) Controls the semi supervised mode. Transport between labeled source and target samples of different classes will exhibit an infinite cost (10 times the maximum value of the cost matrix) max_iter : int, optional (default=100000) The maximum number of iterations before stopping the optimization algorithm if it has not converged. Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling References ---------- .. [1] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 """ def __init__(self, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, log=False, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform, out_of_sample_map='ferradans', limit_max=10, max_iter=100000): self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.log = log self.limit_max = limit_max self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation self.out_of_sample_map = out_of_sample_map self.max_iter = max_iter def fit(self, Xs, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ super(EMDTransport, self).fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) returned_ = emd( a=self.mu_s, b=self.mu_t, M=self.cost_, numItermax=self.max_iter, log=self.log) # coupling estimation if self.log: self.coupling_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self class SinkhornLpl1Transport(BaseTransport): """Domain Adapatation OT method based on sinkhorn algorithm + LpL1 class regularization. Parameters ---------- reg_e : float, optional (default=1) Entropic regularization parameter reg_cl : float, optional (default=0.1) Class regularization parameter max_iter : int, float, optional (default=10) The minimum number of iteration before stopping the optimization algorithm if no it has not converged max_inner_iter : int, float, optional (default=200) The number of iteration in the inner loop log : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the logs of the optimization algorithm tol : float, optional (default=10e-9) Stop threshold on error (inner sinkhorn solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the verbosity of the optimization algorithm metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. distribution_estimation : callable, optional (defaults to the uniform) The kind of distribution estimation to employ out_of_sample_map : string, optional (default="ferradans") The kind of out of sample mapping to apply to transport samples from a domain into another one. Currently the only possible option is "ferradans" which uses the method proposed in [6]. limit_max: float, optional (defaul=np.infty) Controls the semi supervised mode. Transport between labeled source and target samples of different classes will exhibit a cost defined by limit_max. Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling References ---------- .. [1] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 .. [2] Rakotomamonjy, A., Flamary, R., & Courty, N. (2015). Generalized conditional gradient: analysis of convergence and applications. arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.06567. """ def __init__(self, reg_e=1., reg_cl=0.1, max_iter=10, max_inner_iter=200, log=False, tol=10e-9, verbose=False, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform, out_of_sample_map='ferradans', limit_max=np.infty): self.reg_e = reg_e self.reg_cl = reg_cl self.max_iter = max_iter self.max_inner_iter = max_inner_iter self.tol = tol self.log = log self.verbose = verbose self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation self.out_of_sample_map = out_of_sample_map self.limit_max = limit_max def fit(self, Xs, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs, Xt=Xt, ys=ys): super(SinkhornLpl1Transport, self).fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) returned_ = sinkhorn_lpl1_mm( a=self.mu_s, labels_a=ys, b=self.mu_t, M=self.cost_, reg=self.reg_e, eta=self.reg_cl, numItermax=self.max_iter, numInnerItermax=self.max_inner_iter, stopInnerThr=self.tol, verbose=self.verbose, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.coupling_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self class SinkhornL1l2Transport(BaseTransport): """Domain Adapatation OT method based on sinkhorn algorithm + l1l2 class regularization. Parameters ---------- reg_e : float, optional (default=1) Entropic regularization parameter reg_cl : float, optional (default=0.1) Class regularization parameter max_iter : int, float, optional (default=10) The minimum number of iteration before stopping the optimization algorithm if no it has not converged max_inner_iter : int, float, optional (default=200) The number of iteration in the inner loop tol : float, optional (default=10e-9) Stop threshold on error (inner sinkhorn solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the verbosity of the optimization algorithm log : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the logs of the optimization algorithm metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. distribution_estimation : callable, optional (defaults to the uniform) The kind of distribution estimation to employ out_of_sample_map : string, optional (default="ferradans") The kind of out of sample mapping to apply to transport samples from a domain into another one. Currently the only possible option is "ferradans" which uses the method proposed in [6]. limit_max: float, optional (default=10) Controls the semi supervised mode. Transport between labeled source and target samples of different classes will exhibit an infinite cost (10 times the maximum value of the cost matrix) Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling log_ : dictionary The dictionary of log, empty dic if parameter log is not True References ---------- .. [1] N. Courty; R. Flamary; D. Tuia; A. Rakotomamonjy, "Optimal Transport for Domain Adaptation," in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence , vol.PP, no.99, pp.1-1 .. [2] Rakotomamonjy, A., Flamary, R., & Courty, N. (2015). Generalized conditional gradient: analysis of convergence and applications. arXiv preprint arXiv:1510.06567. """ def __init__(self, reg_e=1., reg_cl=0.1, max_iter=10, max_inner_iter=200, tol=10e-9, verbose=False, log=False, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform, out_of_sample_map='ferradans', limit_max=10): self.reg_e = reg_e self.reg_cl = reg_cl self.max_iter = max_iter self.max_inner_iter = max_inner_iter self.tol = tol self.verbose = verbose self.log = log self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation self.out_of_sample_map = out_of_sample_map self.limit_max = limit_max def fit(self, Xs, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs, Xt=Xt, ys=ys): super(SinkhornL1l2Transport, self).fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) returned_ = sinkhorn_l1l2_gl( a=self.mu_s, labels_a=ys, b=self.mu_t, M=self.cost_, reg=self.reg_e, eta=self.reg_cl, numItermax=self.max_iter, numInnerItermax=self.max_inner_iter, stopInnerThr=self.tol, verbose=self.verbose, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.coupling_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self class MappingTransport(BaseEstimator): """MappingTransport: DA methods that aims at jointly estimating a optimal transport coupling and the associated mapping Parameters ---------- mu : float, optional (default=1) Weight for the linear OT loss (>0) eta : float, optional (default=0.001) Regularization term for the linear mapping L (>0) bias : bool, optional (default=False) Estimate linear mapping with constant bias metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. kernel : string, optional (default="linear") The kernel to use either linear or gaussian sigma : float, optional (default=1) The gaussian kernel parameter max_iter : int, optional (default=100) Max number of BCD iterations tol : float, optional (default=1e-5) Stop threshold on relative loss decrease (>0) max_inner_iter : int, optional (default=10) Max number of iterations (inner CG solver) inner_tol : float, optional (default=1e-6) Stop threshold on error (inner CG solver) (>0) log : bool, optional (default=False) record log if True verbose : bool, optional (default=False) Print information along iterations verbose2 : bool, optional (default=False) Print information along iterations Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling mapping_ : array-like, shape (n_features (+ 1), n_features) (if bias) for kernel == linear The associated mapping array-like, shape (n_source_samples (+ 1), n_features) (if bias) for kernel == gaussian log_ : dictionary The dictionary of log, empty dic if parameter log is not True References ---------- .. [8] M. Perrot, N. Courty, R. Flamary, A. Habrard, "Mapping estimation for discrete optimal transport", Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS), 2016. """ def __init__(self, mu=1, eta=0.001, bias=False, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, kernel="linear", sigma=1, max_iter=100, tol=1e-5, max_inner_iter=10, inner_tol=1e-6, log=False, verbose=False, verbose2=False): self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.mu = mu self.eta = eta self.bias = bias self.kernel = kernel self.sigma = sigma self.max_iter = max_iter self.tol = tol self.max_inner_iter = max_inner_iter self.inner_tol = inner_tol self.log = log self.verbose = verbose self.verbose2 = verbose2 def fit(self, Xs=None, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Builds an optimal coupling and estimates the associated mapping from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs, Xt=Xt): self.xs_ = Xs self.xt_ = Xt if self.kernel == "linear": returned_ = joint_OT_mapping_linear( Xs, Xt, mu=self.mu, eta=self.eta, bias=self.bias, verbose=self.verbose, verbose2=self.verbose2, numItermax=self.max_iter, numInnerItermax=self.max_inner_iter, stopThr=self.tol, stopInnerThr=self.inner_tol, log=self.log) elif self.kernel == "gaussian": returned_ = joint_OT_mapping_kernel( Xs, Xt, mu=self.mu, eta=self.eta, bias=self.bias, sigma=self.sigma, verbose=self.verbose, verbose2=self.verbose, numItermax=self.max_iter, numInnerItermax=self.max_inner_iter, stopInnerThr=self.inner_tol, stopThr=self.tol, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.coupling_, self.mapping_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_, self.mapping_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self def transform(self, Xs): """Transports source samples Xs onto target ones Xt Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. Returns ------- transp_Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The transport source samples. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs): if np.array_equal(self.xs_, Xs): # perform standard barycentric mapping transp = self.coupling_ / np.sum(self.coupling_, 1)[:, None] # set nans to 0 transp[~ np.isfinite(transp)] = 0 # compute transported samples transp_Xs = np.dot(transp, self.xt_) else: if self.kernel == "gaussian": K = kernel(Xs, self.xs_, method=self.kernel, sigma=self.sigma) elif self.kernel == "linear": K = Xs if self.bias: K = np.hstack((K, np.ones((Xs.shape[0], 1)))) transp_Xs = K.dot(self.mapping_) return transp_Xs class UnbalancedSinkhornTransport(BaseTransport): """Domain Adapatation unbalanced OT method based on sinkhorn algorithm Parameters ---------- reg_e : float, optional (default=1) Entropic regularization parameter reg_m : float, optional (default=0.1) Mass regularization parameter method : str method used for the solver either 'sinkhorn', 'sinkhorn_stabilized' or 'sinkhorn_epsilon_scaling', see those function for specific parameters max_iter : int, float, optional (default=10) The minimum number of iteration before stopping the optimization algorithm if no it has not converged tol : float, optional (default=10e-9) Stop threshold on error (inner sinkhorn solver) (>0) verbose : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the verbosity of the optimization algorithm log : bool, optional (default=False) Controls the logs of the optimization algorithm metric : string, optional (default="sqeuclidean") The ground metric for the Wasserstein problem norm : string, optional (default=None) If given, normalize the ground metric to avoid numerical errors that can occur with large metric values. distribution_estimation : callable, optional (defaults to the uniform) The kind of distribution estimation to employ out_of_sample_map : string, optional (default="ferradans") The kind of out of sample mapping to apply to transport samples from a domain into another one. Currently the only possible option is "ferradans" which uses the method proposed in [6]. limit_max: float, optional (default=10) Controls the semi supervised mode. Transport between labeled source and target samples of different classes will exhibit an infinite cost (10 times the maximum value of the cost matrix) Attributes ---------- coupling_ : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_target_samples) The optimal coupling log_ : dictionary The dictionary of log, empty dic if parameter log is not True References ---------- .. [1] Chizat, L., Peyré, G., Schmitzer, B., & Vialard, F. X. (2016). Scaling algorithms for unbalanced transport problems. arXiv preprint arXiv:1607.05816. """ def __init__(self, reg_e=1., reg_m=0.1, method='sinkhorn', max_iter=10, tol=1e-9, verbose=False, log=False, metric="sqeuclidean", norm=None, distribution_estimation=distribution_estimation_uniform, out_of_sample_map='ferradans', limit_max=10): self.reg_e = reg_e self.reg_m = reg_m self.method = method self.max_iter = max_iter self.tol = tol self.verbose = verbose self.log = log self.metric = metric self.norm = norm self.distribution_estimation = distribution_estimation self.out_of_sample_map = out_of_sample_map self.limit_max = limit_max def fit(self, Xs, ys=None, Xt=None, yt=None): """Build a coupling matrix from source and target sets of samples (Xs, ys) and (Xt, yt) Parameters ---------- Xs : array-like, shape (n_source_samples, n_features) The training input samples. ys : array-like, shape (n_source_samples,) The class labels Xt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples, n_features) The training input samples. yt : array-like, shape (n_target_samples,) The class labels. If some target samples are unlabeled, fill the yt's elements with -1. Warning: Note that, due to this convention -1 cannot be used as a class label Returns ------- self : object Returns self. """ # check the necessary inputs parameters are here if check_params(Xs=Xs, Xt=Xt): super(UnbalancedSinkhornTransport, self).fit(Xs, ys, Xt, yt) returned_ = sinkhorn_unbalanced( a=self.mu_s, b=self.mu_t, M=self.cost_, reg=self.reg_e, reg_m=self.reg_m, method=self.method, numItermax=self.max_iter, stopThr=self.tol, verbose=self.verbose, log=self.log) # deal with the value of log if self.log: self.coupling_, self.log_ = returned_ else: self.coupling_ = returned_ self.log_ = dict() return self