mirror of https://github.com/davisking/dlib.git
148 lines
6.0 KiB
C++
148 lines
6.0 KiB
C++
// The contents of this file are in the public domain. See LICENSE_FOR_EXAMPLE_PROGRAMS.txt
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/*
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This is an example illustrating the use of the SVM-Rank tool from the dlib
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C++ Library. This is a tool useful for learning to rank objects. For
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example, you might use it to learn to rank web pages in response to a
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user's query. The idea being to rank the most relevant pages higher than
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non-relevant pages.
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In this example, we will create a simple test dataset and show how to learn
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a ranking function from it. The purpose of the function will be to give
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"relevant" objects higher scores than "non-relevant" objects. The idea is
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that you use this score to order the objects so that the most relevant
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objects come to the top of the ranked list.
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Note that we use dense vectors (i.e. dlib::matrix objects) in this example,
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however, the ranking tools can also use sparse vectors as well. See
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svm_sparse_ex.cpp for an example.
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*/
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#include <dlib/svm.h>
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#include <iostream>
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using namespace std;
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using namespace dlib;
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int main()
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{
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try
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{
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// Make a typedef for the kind of object we will be ranking. In this
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// example, we are ranking 2-dimensional vectors.
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typedef matrix<double,2,1> sample_type;
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// Now lets make some testing data. To make it really simple, lets
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// suppose that vectors with positive values in the first dimension
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// should rank higher than other vectors. So what we do is make
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// examples of relevant (i.e. high ranking) and non-relevant (i.e. low
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// ranking) vectors and store them into a ranking_pair object like so:
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ranking_pair<sample_type> data;
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sample_type samp;
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// Make one relevant example.
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samp = 1, 0;
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data.relevant.push_back(samp);
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// Now make a non-relevant example.
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samp = 0, 1;
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data.nonrelevant.push_back(samp);
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// Now that we have some data, we can use a machine learning method to
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// learn a function that will give high scores to the relevant vectors
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// and low scores to the non-relevant vectors.
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// The first thing we do is select the kernel we want to use. For the
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// svm_rank_trainer there are only two options. The linear_kernel and
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// sparse_linear_kernel. The later is used if you want to use sparse
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// vectors to represent your objects. Since we are using dense vectors
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// (i.e. dlib::matrix objects to represent the vectors) we use the
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// linear_kernel.
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typedef linear_kernel<sample_type> kernel_type;
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// Now make a trainer and tell it to learn a ranking function based on
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// our data.
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svm_rank_trainer<kernel_type> trainer;
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decision_function<kernel_type> rank = trainer.train(data);
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// Now if you call rank on a vector it will output a ranking score. In
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// particular, the ranking score for relevant vectors should be larger
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// than the score for non-relevant vectors.
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cout << "ranking score for a relevant vector: " << rank(data.relevant[0]) << endl;
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cout << "ranking score for a non-relevant vector: " << rank(data.nonrelevant[0]) << endl;
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// These output the following:
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/*
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ranking score for a relevant vector: 0.5
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ranking score for a non-relevant vector: -0.5
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*/
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// If we want an overall measure of ranking accuracy, we can find out
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// how often a non-relevant vector was ranked ahead of a relevant
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// vector using test_ranking_function(). In this case, it returns a
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// value of 1, indicating that the rank function outputs a perfect
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// ranking.
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cout << "accuracy: " << test_ranking_function(rank, data) << endl;
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// We can also see the ranking weights:
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cout << "learned ranking weights: \n" << rank.basis_vectors(0) << endl;
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// In this case they are:
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// 0.5
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// -0.5
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// In the above example, our data contains just two sets of objects.
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// The relevant set and non-relevant set. The trainer is attempting to
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// find a ranking function that gives every relevant vector a higher
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// score than every non-relevant vector. Sometimes what you want to do
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// is a little more complex than this.
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//
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// For example, in the web page ranking example we have to rank pages
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// based on a user's query. In this case, each query will have its own
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// set of relevant and non-relevant documents. What might be relevant
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// to one query may well be non-relevant to another. So in this case
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// we don't have a single global set of relevant web pages and another
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// set of non-relevant web pages.
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//
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// To handle cases like this, we can simply give multiple ranking_pair
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// instances to the trainer. Therefore, each ranking_pair would
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// represent the relevant/non-relevant sets for a particular query. An
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// example is shown below (for simplicity, we reuse our data from above
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// to make 4 identical "queries").
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std::vector<ranking_pair<sample_type> > queries;
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queries.push_back(data);
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queries.push_back(data);
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queries.push_back(data);
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queries.push_back(data);
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// We train just as before.
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rank = trainer.train(queries);
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// Now that we have multiple ranking_pair instances, we can also use
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// cross_validate_ranking_trainer(). This performs cross-validation by
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// splitting the queries up into folds. That is, it lets the trainer
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// train on a subset of ranking_pair instances and tests on the rest.
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// It does this over 4 different splits and returns the overall ranking
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// accuracy based on the held out data.
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cout << "cv-accuracy: "<< cross_validate_ranking_trainer(trainer, queries, 4) << endl;
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}
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catch (std::exception& e)
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{
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cout << e.what() << endl;
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}
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}
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