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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Solvers for the original linear program OT problem
"""
import numpy as np
# import compiled emd
from .emd import emd_c
import multiprocessing
def emd(a, b, M):
"""Solves the Earth Movers distance problem and returns the OT matrix
.. math::
\gamma = arg\min_\gamma <\gamma,M>_F
s.t. \gamma 1 = a
\gamma^T 1= b
\gamma\geq 0
where :
- M is the metric cost matrix
- a and b are the sample weights
Uses the algorithm proposed in [1]_
Parameters
----------
a : (ns,) ndarray, float64
Source histogram (uniform weigth if empty list)
b : (nt,) ndarray, float64
Target histogram (uniform weigth if empty list)
M : (ns,nt) ndarray, float64
loss matrix
Returns
-------
gamma: (ns x nt) ndarray
Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters
Examples
--------
Simple example with obvious solution. The function emd accepts lists and
perform automatic conversion to numpy arrays
>>> import ot
>>> a=[.5,.5]
>>> b=[.5,.5]
>>> M=[[0.,1.],[1.,0.]]
>>> ot.emd(a,b,M)
array([[ 0.5, 0. ],
[ 0. , 0.5]])
References
----------
.. [1] Bonneel, N., Van De Panne, M., Paris, S., & Heidrich, W.
(2011, December). Displacement interpolation using Lagrangian mass
transport. In ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG) (Vol. 30, No. 6, p.
158). ACM.
See Also
--------
ot.bregman.sinkhorn : Entropic regularized OT
ot.optim.cg : General regularized OT"""
a = np.asarray(a, dtype=np.float64)
b = np.asarray(b, dtype=np.float64)
M = np.asarray(M, dtype=np.float64)
# if empty array given then use unifor distributions
if len(a) == 0:
a = np.ones((M.shape[0], ), dtype=np.float64)/M.shape[0]
if len(b) == 0:
b = np.ones((M.shape[1], ), dtype=np.float64)/M.shape[1]
return emd_c(a, b, M)
def emd2(a, b, M,processes=None):
"""Solves the Earth Movers distance problem and returns the loss
.. math::
\gamma = arg\min_\gamma <\gamma,M>_F
s.t. \gamma 1 = a
\gamma^T 1= b
\gamma\geq 0
where :
- M is the metric cost matrix
- a and b are the sample weights
Uses the algorithm proposed in [1]_
Parameters
----------
a : (ns,) ndarray, float64
Source histogram (uniform weigth if empty list)
b : (nt,) ndarray, float64
Target histogram (uniform weigth if empty list)
M : (ns,nt) ndarray, float64
loss matrix
Returns
-------
gamma: (ns x nt) ndarray
Optimal transportation matrix for the given parameters
Examples
--------
Simple example with obvious solution. The function emd accepts lists and
perform automatic conversion to numpy arrays
>>> import ot
>>> a=[.5,.5]
>>> b=[.5,.5]
>>> M=[[0.,1.],[1.,0.]]
>>> ot.emd2(a,b,M)
0.0
References
----------
.. [1] Bonneel, N., Van De Panne, M., Paris, S., & Heidrich, W.
(2011, December). Displacement interpolation using Lagrangian mass
transport. In ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG) (Vol. 30, No. 6, p.
158). ACM.
See Also
--------
ot.bregman.sinkhorn : Entropic regularized OT
ot.optim.cg : General regularized OT"""
a = np.asarray(a, dtype=np.float64)
b = np.asarray(b, dtype=np.float64)
M = np.asarray(M, dtype=np.float64)
# if empty array given then use unifor distributions
if len(a) == 0:
a = np.ones((M.shape[0], ), dtype=np.float64)/M.shape[0]
if len(b) == 0:
b = np.ones((M.shape[1], ), dtype=np.float64)/M.shape[1]
if len(b.shape)==1:
return np.sum(emd_c(a, b, M)*M)
else:
nb=b.shape[1]
ls=[(a,b[:,k],M) for k in range(nb)]
# run emd in multiprocessing
res=parmap(emd2, ls,processes)
np.array(res)
# with Pool(processes) as p:
# res=p.map(f, ls)
# return np.array(res)
def fun(f, q_in, q_out):
while True:
i, x = q_in.get()
if i is None:
break
q_out.put((i, f(x)))
def parmap(f, X, nprocs):
q_in = multiprocessing.Queue(1)
q_out = multiprocessing.Queue()
proc = [multiprocessing.Process(target=fun, args=(f, q_in, q_out))
for _ in range(nprocs)]
for p in proc:
p.daemon = True
p.start()
sent = [q_in.put((i, x)) for i, x in enumerate(X)]
[q_in.put((None, None)) for _ in range(nprocs)]
res = [q_out.get() for _ in range(len(sent))]
[p.join() for p in proc]
return [x for i, x in sorted(res)]
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