MSDS458 Research Assignment 02 - Part 1¶

More Technical: Throughout the notebook. This types of boxes provide more technical details and extra references about what you are seeing. They contain helpful tips, but you can safely skip them the first time you run through the code.

The CIFAR-10 dataset (Canadian Institute For Advanced Research) is a collection of images that are commonly used to train machine learning and computer vision algorithms. It is one of the most widely used datasets for machine learning research. The CIFAR-10 dataset contains 60,000 32x32 color images in 10 different classes. The 10 different classes represent airplanes, cars, birds, cats, deer, dogs, frogs, horses, ships, and trucks. There are 6,000 images of each class.

The CIFAR-10 dataset
https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~kriz/cifar.html

Imports¶

In [1]:
import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
from packaging import version

from sklearn.metrics import confusion_matrix, classification_report
from sklearn.metrics import accuracy_score
from sklearn.metrics import mean_squared_error as MSE
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import seaborn as sns

import tensorflow as tf
from tensorflow import keras
from tensorflow.keras import models, layers
from tensorflow.keras.models import Sequential
from tensorflow.keras.layers import Conv2D, MaxPool2D, BatchNormalization, Dropout, Flatten, Dense
from tensorflow.keras.callbacks import ModelCheckpoint, EarlyStopping
from tensorflow.keras.preprocessing import image
from tensorflow.keras.utils import to_categorical
2022-11-20 11:06:11.748232: I tensorflow/core/platform/cpu_feature_guard.cc:193] This TensorFlow binary is optimized with oneAPI Deep Neural Network Library (oneDNN) to use the following CPU instructions in performance-critical operations:  AVX2 FMA
To enable them in other operations, rebuild TensorFlow with the appropriate compiler flags.
In [2]:
%matplotlib inline
np.set_printoptions(precision=3, suppress=True)

Verify TensorFlow Version and Keras Version¶

In [3]:
print("This notebook requires TensorFlow 2.0 or above")
print("TensorFlow version: ", tf.__version__)
assert version.parse(tf.__version__).release[0] >=2
This notebook requires TensorFlow 2.0 or above
TensorFlow version:  2.10.0
In [4]:
print("Keras version: ", keras.__version__)
Keras version:  2.10.0

Mount Google Drive to Colab Environment¶

In [5]:
# from google.colab import drive
# drive.mount('/content/gdrive')

EDA Functions¶

In [6]:
def get_three_classes(x, y):
    def indices_of(class_id):
        indices, _ = np.where(y == float(class_id))
        return indices

    indices = np.concatenate([indices_of(0), indices_of(1), indices_of(2)], axis=0)
    
    x = x[indices]
    y = y[indices]
    
    count = x.shape[0]
    indices = np.random.choice(range(count), count, replace=False)
    
    x = x[indices]
    y = y[indices]
    
    y = tf.keras.utils.to_categorical(y)
    
    return x, y
In [7]:
def show_random_examples(x, y, p):
    indices = np.random.choice(range(x.shape[0]), 10, replace=False)
    
    x = x[indices]
    y = y[indices]
    p = p[indices]
    
    plt.figure(figsize=(10, 5))
    for i in range(10):
        plt.subplot(2, 5, i + 1)
        plt.imshow(x[i])
        plt.xticks([])
        plt.yticks([])
        col = 'green' if np.argmax(y[i]) == np.argmax(p[i]) else 'red'
        plt.xlabel(class_names_preview[np.argmax(p[i])], color=col)
    plt.show()

Research Assignment Reporting Functions¶

In [8]:
def plot_history(history):
  losses = history.history['loss']
  accs = history.history['accuracy']
  val_losses = history.history['val_loss']
  val_accs = history.history['val_accuracy']
  epochs = len(losses)

  plt.figure(figsize=(16, 4))
  for i, metrics in enumerate(zip([losses, accs], [val_losses, val_accs], ['Loss', 'Accuracy'])):
    plt.subplot(1, 2, i + 1)
    plt.plot(range(epochs), metrics[0], label='Training {}'.format(metrics[2]))
    plt.plot(range(epochs), metrics[1], label='Validation {}'.format(metrics[2]))
    plt.legend()
  plt.show()
In [9]:
def print_validation_report(y_test, predictions):
    print("Classification Report")
    print(classification_report(y_test, predictions))
    print('Accuracy Score: {}'.format(accuracy_score(y_test, predictions)))
    print('Root Mean Square Error: {}'.format(np.sqrt(MSE(y_test, predictions)))) 
In [10]:
def plot_confusion_matrix(y_true, y_pred):
    mtx = confusion_matrix(y_true, y_pred)
    fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(8,8))
    sns.heatmap(mtx, annot=True, fmt='d', linewidths=.75,  cbar=False, ax=ax,cmap='Blues',linecolor='white')
    #  square=True,
    plt.ylabel('true label')
    plt.xlabel('predicted label')

Loading cifar10 Dataset¶

The CIFAR-10 dataset consists of 60000 32x32 colour images in 10 classes, with 6000 images per class. There are 50000 training images and 10000 test images.

The dataset is divided into five training batches and one test batch, each with 10000 images. The test batch contains exactly 1000 randomly-selected images from each class. The training batches contain the remaining images in random order, but some training batches may contain more images from one class than another. Between them, the training batches contain exactly 5000 images from each class.

In [11]:
(x_train, y_train), (x_test, y_test) = keras.datasets.cifar10.load_data()
  • Tuple of Numpy arrays: (x_train, y_train), (x_test, y_test).
  • x_train, x_test: uint8 arrays of color image data with shapes (num_samples, 32, 32).
  • y_train, y_test: uint8 arrays of digit labels (integers in range 0-9)

EDA Training and Test Datasets¶

  • Imported 50000 examples for training and 10000 examples for test
  • Imported 50000 labels for training and 10000 labels for test
In [12]:
print('train_images:\t{}'.format(x_train.shape))
print('train_labels:\t{}'.format(y_train.shape))
print('test_images:\t\t{}'.format(x_test.shape))
print('test_labels:\t\t{}'.format(y_test.shape))
train_images:	(50000, 32, 32, 3)
train_labels:	(50000, 1)
test_images:		(10000, 32, 32, 3)
test_labels:		(10000, 1)

Review Labels¶

In [13]:
print("First ten labels training dataset:\n {}\n".format(y_train[0:10]))
print("This output the numeric label, need to convert to item description")
First ten labels training dataset:
 [[6]
 [9]
 [9]
 [4]
 [1]
 [1]
 [2]
 [7]
 [8]
 [3]]

This output the numeric label, need to convert to item description

Plot Subset of Examples¶

In [14]:
(train_images, train_labels),(test_images, test_labels)= tf.keras.datasets.cifar10.load_data()
In [15]:
x_preview, y_preview = get_three_classes(train_images, train_labels)
x_preview, y_preview = get_three_classes(test_images, test_labels)
In [16]:
class_names_preview = ['aeroplane', 'car', 'bird']

show_random_examples(x_preview, y_preview, y_preview)

Preprocessing Data for Model Development¶

The labels are an array of integers, ranging from 0 to 9. These correspond to the class of clothing the image represents:

Label Class_
0 airplane
1 automobile
2 bird
3 cat
4 deer
5 dog
6 frog
7 horse
8 ship
9 truck
In [17]:
class_names = ['airplane'
,'automobile'
,'bird'
,'cat'
,'deer'
,'dog'
,'frog' 
,'horse'
,'ship'
,'truck']

Create Validation Data Set¶

In [18]:
x_train_split, x_valid_split, y_train_split, y_valid_split = train_test_split(x_train
                                                                              ,y_train
                                                                              ,test_size=.1
                                                                              ,random_state=42
                                                                              ,shuffle=True)

Confirm Datasets {Train, Validation, Test}¶

In [19]:
print(x_train_split.shape, x_valid_split.shape, x_test.shape)
(45000, 32, 32, 3) (5000, 32, 32, 3) (10000, 32, 32, 3)

Rescale Examples {Train, Validation, Test}¶

The images are 28x28 NumPy arrays, with pixel values ranging from 0 to 255

  1. Each element in each example is a pixel value
  2. Pixel values range from 0 to 255
  3. 0 = black
  4. 255 = white
In [20]:
x_train_norm = x_train_split/255
x_valid_norm = x_valid_split/255
x_test_norm = x_test/255

Create the Model¶

Build CNN Model¶

We use a Sequential class defined in Keras to create our model. The first 9 layers Conv2D MaxPooling handle feature learning. The last 3 layers, handle classification

In [21]:
model = Sequential([
  Conv2D(filters=128, kernel_size=(3, 3), strides=(1, 1), activation=tf.nn.relu,input_shape=x_train_norm.shape[1:]),
  MaxPool2D((2, 2),strides=2),
  Conv2D(filters=256, kernel_size=(3, 3), strides=(1, 1), activation=tf.nn.relu),
  MaxPool2D((2, 2),strides=2),
  Conv2D(filters=512, kernel_size=(3, 3), strides=(1, 1), activation=tf.nn.relu),
  MaxPool2D((2, 2),strides=2),
  Flatten(),
  Dense(units=10, activation=tf.nn.softmax)       
])
2022-11-20 11:06:19.497396: I tensorflow/core/platform/cpu_feature_guard.cc:193] This TensorFlow binary is optimized with oneAPI Deep Neural Network Library (oneDNN) to use the following CPU instructions in performance-critical operations:  AVX2 FMA
To enable them in other operations, rebuild TensorFlow with the appropriate compiler flags.
In [22]:
model.summary()
Model: "sequential"
_________________________________________________________________
 Layer (type)                Output Shape              Param #   
=================================================================
 conv2d (Conv2D)             (None, 30, 30, 128)       3584      
                                                                 
 max_pooling2d (MaxPooling2D  (None, 15, 15, 128)      0         
 )                                                               
                                                                 
 conv2d_1 (Conv2D)           (None, 13, 13, 256)       295168    
                                                                 
 max_pooling2d_1 (MaxPooling  (None, 6, 6, 256)        0         
 2D)                                                             
                                                                 
 conv2d_2 (Conv2D)           (None, 4, 4, 512)         1180160   
                                                                 
 max_pooling2d_2 (MaxPooling  (None, 2, 2, 512)        0         
 2D)                                                             
                                                                 
 flatten (Flatten)           (None, 2048)              0         
                                                                 
 dense (Dense)               (None, 10)                20490     
                                                                 
=================================================================
Total params: 1,499,402
Trainable params: 1,499,402
Non-trainable params: 0
_________________________________________________________________
In [23]:
keras.utils.plot_model(model, "CIFAR10.png", show_shapes=True) 
You must install pydot (`pip install pydot`) and install graphviz (see instructions at https://graphviz.gitlab.io/download/) for plot_model to work.

Compiling the model¶

In addition to setting up our model architecture, we also need to define which algorithm should the model use in order to optimize the weights and biases as per the given data. We will use stochastic gradient descent.

We also need to define a loss function. Think of this function as the difference between the predicted outputs and the actual outputs given in the dataset. This loss needs to be minimised in order to have a higher model accuracy. That's what the optimization algorithm essentially does - it minimises the loss during model training. For our multi-class classification problem, categorical cross entropy is commonly used.

Finally, we will use the accuracy during training as a metric to keep track of as the model trains.

tf.keras.losses.SparseCategoricalCrossentropy
https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/keras/losses/SparseCategoricalCrossentropy
In [24]:
model.compile(optimizer='adam',
              loss=tf.keras.losses.SparseCategoricalCrossentropy(from_logits=False),
              metrics=['accuracy'])

Training the model¶

Module: tf.keras.callbacks
tf.keras.callbacks.EarlyStopping
https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/keras/callbacks/EarlyStopping
tf.keras.callbacks.ModelCheckpoint
https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/keras/callbacks/ModelCheckpoint
In [25]:
history = model.fit(x_train_norm
                    ,y_train_split
                    ,epochs=200
                    ,batch_size=64
                    ,validation_data=(x_valid_norm, y_valid_split)
                    ,callbacks=[
                     tf.keras.callbacks.ModelCheckpoint("CNN_model.h5",save_best_only=True,save_weights_only=False) 
                     ,tf.keras.callbacks.EarlyStopping(monitor='val_accuracy', patience=3),
                    ]                                                                                                           
                   )
Epoch 1/200
704/704 [==============================] - 104s 148ms/step - loss: 1.4977 - accuracy: 0.4619 - val_loss: 1.1722 - val_accuracy: 0.5820
Epoch 2/200
704/704 [==============================] - 176s 251ms/step - loss: 1.0795 - accuracy: 0.6260 - val_loss: 1.0739 - val_accuracy: 0.6218
Epoch 3/200
704/704 [==============================] - 357s 508ms/step - loss: 0.8929 - accuracy: 0.6940 - val_loss: 0.9444 - val_accuracy: 0.6704
Epoch 4/200
704/704 [==============================] - 395s 561ms/step - loss: 0.7738 - accuracy: 0.7330 - val_loss: 0.8591 - val_accuracy: 0.7064
Epoch 5/200
704/704 [==============================] - 487s 693ms/step - loss: 0.6604 - accuracy: 0.7726 - val_loss: 0.8364 - val_accuracy: 0.7152
Epoch 6/200
704/704 [==============================] - 440s 625ms/step - loss: 0.5628 - accuracy: 0.8073 - val_loss: 0.8216 - val_accuracy: 0.7244
Epoch 7/200
704/704 [==============================] - 458s 651ms/step - loss: 0.4739 - accuracy: 0.8380 - val_loss: 0.8280 - val_accuracy: 0.7300
Epoch 8/200
704/704 [==============================] - 403s 572ms/step - loss: 0.3866 - accuracy: 0.8659 - val_loss: 0.8925 - val_accuracy: 0.7220
Epoch 9/200
704/704 [==============================] - 351s 498ms/step - loss: 0.3149 - accuracy: 0.8925 - val_loss: 1.0170 - val_accuracy: 0.7166
Epoch 10/200
704/704 [==============================] - 340s 483ms/step - loss: 0.2590 - accuracy: 0.9106 - val_loss: 0.9931 - val_accuracy: 0.7212

Evaluate the model¶

In order to ensure that this is not a simple "memorization" by the machine, we should evaluate the performance on the test set. This is easy to do, we simply use the evaluate method on our model.

In [26]:
model = tf.keras.models.load_model("CNN_model.h5")
print(f"Test acc: {model.evaluate(x_test_norm, y_test)[1]:.3f}")
313/313 [==============================] - 15s 44ms/step - loss: 0.8405 - accuracy: 0.7203
Test acc: 0.720

Predictions¶

In [27]:
preds = model.predict(x_test_norm)
print('shape of preds: ', preds.shape)
313/313 [==============================] - 15s 46ms/step
shape of preds:  (10000, 10)

Plotting Performance Metrics¶

We use Matplotlib to create 2 plots--displaying the training and validation loss (resp. accuracy) for each (training) epoch side by side.

In [28]:
history_dict = history.history
history_dict.keys()
Out[28]:
dict_keys(['loss', 'accuracy', 'val_loss', 'val_accuracy'])
In [29]:
history_df=pd.DataFrame(history_dict)
history_df.tail().round(3)
Out[29]:
loss accuracy val_loss val_accuracy
5 0.563 0.807 0.822 0.724
6 0.474 0.838 0.828 0.730
7 0.387 0.866 0.893 0.722
8 0.315 0.892 1.017 0.717
9 0.259 0.911 0.993 0.721

Plot Training Metrics (Loss and Accuracy)¶

In [30]:
plot_history(history)

Confusion matrices¶

Using both sklearn.metrics. Then we visualize the confusion matrix and see what that tells us.

In [31]:
pred1= model.predict(x_test_norm)
pred1=np.argmax(pred1, axis=1)
313/313 [==============================] - 16s 50ms/step
In [32]:
print_validation_report(y_test, pred1)
Classification Report
              precision    recall  f1-score   support

           0       0.71      0.82      0.76      1000
           1       0.81      0.88      0.84      1000
           2       0.68      0.58      0.63      1000
           3       0.53      0.55      0.54      1000
           4       0.74      0.59      0.66      1000
           5       0.57      0.69      0.63      1000
           6       0.76      0.81      0.78      1000
           7       0.74      0.79      0.76      1000
           8       0.90      0.74      0.81      1000
           9       0.85      0.75      0.79      1000

    accuracy                           0.72     10000
   macro avg       0.73      0.72      0.72     10000
weighted avg       0.73      0.72      0.72     10000

Accuracy Score: 0.7203
Root Mean Square Error: 2.2019309707617993
In [33]:
plot_confusion_matrix(y_test,pred1)

Load HDF5 Model Format¶

tf.keras.models.load_model
https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/keras/models/load_model
In [34]:
model = tf.keras.models.load_model('CNN_model.h5')
In [35]:
preds = model.predict(x_test_norm)
313/313 [==============================] - 15s 47ms/step
In [36]:
preds.shape
Out[36]:
(10000, 10)

Predictions¶

In [37]:
cm = sns.light_palette((260, 75, 60), input="husl", as_cmap=True)
In [38]:
df = pd.DataFrame(preds[0:20], columns = ['airplane', 'automobile', 'bird', 'cat', 'deer', 'dog', 'frog', 'horse', 'ship', 'truck'])
df.style.format("{:.2%}").background_gradient(cmap=cm)
Out[38]:
  airplane automobile bird cat deer dog frog horse ship truck
0 0.02% 0.00% 0.09% 71.83% 0.00% 27.77% 0.23% 0.01% 0.03% 0.01%
1 0.77% 4.76% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 94.43% 0.04%
2 26.41% 41.94% 0.30% 0.79% 0.37% 0.46% 0.04% 2.20% 23.68% 3.80%
3 96.62% 0.16% 0.15% 0.05% 0.01% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 3.00% 0.00%
4 0.00% 0.01% 2.80% 3.13% 18.16% 0.07% 75.82% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
5 0.00% 0.06% 0.13% 2.07% 0.11% 0.58% 96.79% 0.22% 0.00% 0.03%
6 0.74% 64.95% 0.03% 4.39% 0.00% 1.67% 0.13% 0.00% 0.00% 28.09%
7 0.13% 0.00% 1.11% 0.65% 0.41% 0.26% 97.34% 0.08% 0.01% 0.01%
8 0.03% 0.00% 1.15% 83.53% 2.16% 0.81% 0.64% 11.68% 0.00% 0.01%
9 1.84% 90.36% 0.03% 0.03% 0.00% 0.01% 0.03% 0.03% 0.37% 7.29%
10 72.44% 0.18% 5.21% 1.38% 10.72% 5.98% 0.06% 0.87% 3.07% 0.09%
11 0.00% 0.87% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 99.12%
12 0.00% 0.08% 5.04% 3.85% 0.59% 90.24% 0.08% 0.10% 0.01% 0.00%
13 0.02% 0.00% 0.04% 0.01% 0.13% 0.89% 0.00% 98.91% 0.00% 0.00%
14 0.00% 0.07% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.01% 99.91%
15 1.52% 0.15% 0.06% 1.04% 0.14% 0.03% 63.38% 0.00% 33.68% 0.00%
16 0.00% 0.01% 0.04% 2.53% 0.00% 97.38% 0.02% 0.02% 0.00% 0.01%
17 0.23% 0.04% 1.64% 29.26% 7.12% 9.42% 0.52% 51.05% 0.03% 0.69%
18 0.11% 0.27% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 99.40% 0.21%
19 0.00% 0.02% 0.20% 0.39% 0.28% 0.46% 98.51% 0.14% 0.00% 0.00%
In [39]:
(_,_), (test_images, test_labels) = tf.keras.datasets.cifar10.load_data()

img = test_images[2000]
img_tensor = image.img_to_array(img)
img_tensor = np.expand_dims(img_tensor, axis=0)

class_names = ['airplane'
,'automobile'
,'bird'
,'cat'
,'deer'
,'dog'
,'frog' 
,'horse'
,'ship'
,'truck']

plt.imshow(img, cmap='viridis')
plt.axis('off')
plt.show()
In [40]:
# Extracts the outputs of the top 8 layers:
layer_outputs = [layer.output for layer in model.layers[:8]]
# Creates a model that will return these outputs, given the model input:
activation_model = models.Model(inputs=model.input, outputs=layer_outputs)
In [41]:
activations = activation_model.predict(img_tensor)
len(activations)
1/1 [==============================] - 1s 562ms/step
Out[41]:
8
In [42]:
layer_names = []
for layer in model.layers:
    layer_names.append(layer.name)
    
layer_names
Out[42]:
['conv2d',
 'max_pooling2d',
 'dropout',
 'conv2d_1',
 'max_pooling2d_1',
 'dropout_1',
 'flatten',
 'dense']
In [43]:
# These are the names of the layers, so can have them as part of our plot
layer_names = []
for layer in model.layers[:3]:
    layer_names.append(layer.name)

images_per_row = 16

# Now let's display our feature maps
for layer_name, layer_activation in zip(layer_names, activations):
    # This is the number of features in the feature map
    n_features = layer_activation.shape[-1]

    # The feature map has shape (1, size, size, n_features)
    size = layer_activation.shape[1]

    # We will tile the activation channels in this matrix
    n_cols = n_features // images_per_row
    display_grid = np.zeros((size * n_cols, images_per_row * size))

    # We'll tile each filter into this big horizontal grid
    for col in range(n_cols):
        for row in range(images_per_row):
            channel_image = layer_activation[0,
                                             :, :,
                                             col * images_per_row + row]
            # Post-process the feature to make it visually palatable
            channel_image -= channel_image.mean()
            channel_image /= channel_image.std()
            channel_image *= 64
            channel_image += 128
            channel_image = np.clip(channel_image, 0, 255).astype('uint8')
            display_grid[col * size : (col + 1) * size,
                         row * size : (row + 1) * size] = channel_image

    # Display the grid
    scale = 1. / size
    plt.figure(figsize=(scale * display_grid.shape[1],
                        scale * display_grid.shape[0]))
    plt.title(layer_name)
    plt.grid(False)
    plt.imshow(display_grid, aspect='auto', cmap='viridis')
    
plt.show();
/var/folders/zz/wfk650fx7lx3mmyd6_y3yxgr0000gr/T/ipykernel_32153/1872159762.py:28: RuntimeWarning: invalid value encountered in true_divide
  channel_image /= channel_image.std()