Python API

This section includes information for using the pure Python API of bob.learn.mlp.

bob.learn.mlp.get_config()[source]

Returns a string containing the configuration information.

class bob.learn.mlp.BackProp(batch_size, cost[, machine[, train_biases]]) → new BackProp

Bases: bob.learn.mlp.Trainer

BackProp(other) -> new BackProp

Sets an MLP to perform discrimination based on vanilla error back-propagation as defined in “Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning” by C.M. Bishop, chapter 5 or else, “Pattern Classification” by Duda, Hart and Stork, chapter 6.

To create a new trainer, either pass the batch-size, cost functor, machine and a biases-training flag or another trainer you’d like the parameters copied from.

Keyword parameters:

batch_size, int

The size of each batch used for the forward and backward steps. If you set this to 1, then you are implementing stochastic training.

Note

This setting affects the convergence.

cost, bob.learn.mlp.Cost
An object that can calculate the cost at every iteration.
machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
This parameter that will be used as a basis for this trainer’s internal properties (cache sizes, for instance).
train_biases, bool
A boolean indicating if we should train the biases weights (set it to True) or not (set it to False).
other, bob.learn.mlp.Trainer
Another trainer from which this new copy will get its properties from. If you use this constructor than a new (deep) copy of the trainer is created.
learning_rate

The learning rate (\(\alpha\)) to be used for the back-propagation (defaults to 0.1).

momentum

The momentum (\(\mu\)) to be used for the back-propagation. This value allows for some memory on previous weight updates to be used for the next update (defaults to 0.0).

previous_bias_derivatives

The derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific biases of the network, from the previous training step. The derivatives are arranged to match the organization of weights of the machine being trained.

previous_derivatives

The derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific weights of the network, from the previous training step. The derivatives are arranged to match the organization of weights of the machine being trained.

reset()

Re-initializes the whole training apparatus to start training a new machine. This will effectively reset previous derivatives to zero.

set_previous_bias_derivative()

Sets the cost bias derivative for a given bias layer (index).

set_previous_derivative()

Sets the previous cost derivative for a given weight layer (index).

train(machine, input, target) → None

Trains the MLP to perform discrimination using error back-propagation

Call this method to train the MLP to perform discrimination using back-propagation with (optional) momentum. Concretely, this executes the following update rule for the weights (and biases, optionally):

\begin{align} \theta_j(t+1) & = & \theta_j - [ (1-\mu)\Delta\theta_j(t) + \mu\Delta\theta_j(t-1) ] \\ \Delta\theta_j(t) & = & \alpha\frac{1}{N}\sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j} \end{align}

The training is executed outside the machine context, but uses all the current machine layout. The given machine is updated with new weights and biases at the end of the training that is performed a single time.

You must iterate (in Python) as much as you want to refine the training.

The machine given as input is checked for compatibility with the current initialized settings. If the two are not compatible, an exception is thrown.

Note

In BackProp, training is done in batches. You should set the batch size properly at class initialization or use setBatchSize(). The number of rows in the input should be in accordance with the set batch size. If the batch size currently set is incompatible with the given data an exception is raised.

Note

The machine is not initialized randomly at each call to this method. It is your task to call bob.learn.mlp.Machine.randomize() once at the machine you want to train and then call this method as many times as you think is necessary. This design allows for a stopping criteria to be encoded outside the scope of this trainer and for this method to only focus on applying the training when requested to. Stochastic training can be executed by setting the batch_size to 1.

Keyword arguments:

machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
The machine that will be trained. You must have called bob.learn.mlp.Trainer.initialize() which a similarly configured machine before being able to call this method, or an exception may be thrown.
input, array-like, 2D with float64 as data type
A 2D numpy.ndarray with 64-bit floats containing the input data for the MLP to which this training step will be based on. The matrix should be organized so each input (example) lies on a single row of input.
target, array-like, 2D with float64 as data type
A 2D numpy.ndarray with 64-bit floats containing the target data for the MLP to which this training step will be based on. The matrix should be organized so each target lies on a single row of target, matching each input example in input.
class bob.learn.mlp.Cost

Bases: object

A base class for evaluating the performance cost.

This is the base class for all concrete (C++ only) loss function implementations. You cannot instantiate objects of this type directly, use one of the derived classes.

error(output, target[, result]) → result

Computes the back-propagated error for a given MLP output layer.

Computes the back-propagated error for a given MLP output layer, given its activation function and outputs - i.e., the error back-propagated through the last layer neuron up to the synapse connecting the last hidden layer to the output layer.

This implementation allows for optimization in the calculation of the back-propagated errors in cases where there is a possibility of mathematical simplification when using a certain combination of cost-function and activation. For example, using a ML-cost and a logistic activation function.

Keyword arguments:

output, ND array, float64 | scalar
Real output from the machine. May be a N-dimensional array or a plain scalar.
target, ND array, float64 | scalar
Target output you are training to achieve. The data type and extents for this object must match that of target.
result (optional), ND array, float64
Where to place the result from the calculation. You can pass this argument if the input are N-dimensional arrays. Otherwise, it is an error to pass such a container. If the inputs are arrays and an object for result is passed, then its dimensions and data-type must match that of both output and result.
Returns the cost as a scalar, if the input were scalars or as
an array with matching size of output and target otherwise.
f(output, target[, result]) → result

Computes the cost, given the current and expected outputs.

Keyword arguments:

output, ND array, float64 | scalar
Real output from the machine. May be a N-dimensional array or a plain scalar.
target, ND array, float64 | scalar
Target output you are training to achieve. The data type and extents for this object must match that of target.
result (optional), ND array, float64
Where to place the result from the calculation. You can pass this argument if the input are N-dimensional arrays. Otherwise, it is an error to pass such a container. If the inputs are arrays and an object for result is passed, then its dimensions and data-type must match that of both output and result.

Returns the cost as a scalar, if the input were scalars or as an array with matching size of output and target otherwise.

f_prime(output, target[, result]) → result

Computes the derivative of the cost w.r.t. output.

Keyword arguments:

output, ND array, float64 | scalar
Real output from the machine. May be a N-dimensional array or a plain scalar.
target, ND array, float64 | scalar
Target output you are training to achieve. The data type and extents for this object must match that of target.
result (optional), ND array, float64
Where to place the result from the calculation. You can pass this argument if the input are N-dimensional arrays. Otherwise, it is an error to pass such a container. If the inputs are arrays and an object for result is passed, then its dimensions and data-type must match that of both output and result.

Returns the cost as a scalar, if the input were scalars or as an array with matching size of output and target otherwise.

class bob.learn.mlp.CrossEntropyLoss(actfun) → new CrossEntropyLoss functor

Bases: bob.learn.mlp.Cost

Calculates the Cross Entropy Loss between output and target.

The cross entropy loss is defined as follows:

\[J = - y \cdot \log{(\hat{y})} - (1-y) \log{(1-\hat{y})}\]

where \(\hat{y}\) is the output estimated by your machine and \(y\) is the expected output.

Keyword arguments:

actfun

The activation function object used at the last layer. If you set this to bob.learn.activation.Logistic, a mathematical simplification is possible in which backprop_error() can benefit increasing the numerical stability of the training process. The simplification goes as follows:

\[b = \delta \cdot \varphi'(z)\]

But, for the cross-entropy loss:

\[\delta = \frac{\hat{y} - y}{\hat{y}(1 - \hat{y})}\]

and \(\varphi'(z) = \hat{y} - (1 - \hat{y})\), so:

\[b = \hat{y} - y\]
logistic_activation

Tells if this functor is set to operate together with a bob.learn.activation.Logistic activation function.

class bob.learn.mlp.DataShuffler(data, target) → New DataShuffler

Bases: object

Serves data from a training set, in a random way.

Objects of this class are capable of being populated with data from one or multiple classes and matching target values. Once setup, the shuffer can randomly select a number of vectors and accompaning targets for the different classes, filling up user containers.

Data shufflers are particular useful for training neural networks.

Keyword arguments:

data, sequence of array-like 2D float64
The input data are divided into sets corresponding to the elements of each input class. Within the class array, each row is expected to correspond to one observation of that class.
target, sequence of array-like 1D float64
The target arrays correspond to the targets for each of the input arrays. The number of targets must match the number of 2D array objects given in data.
auto_stdnorm

Defines if we use or not automatic standard (Z) normalisation

data_width

The number of features (i.e. the width) of each data vector

draw([n, [data, [target, [rng]]]]) -> (data, target)

Draws a random number of data-target pairs from the input data.

This method will draw a given number n of data-target pairs from the input data, randomly. You can specific the destination containers data and target which, if provided, must be 2D arrays of type float64` with as many rows as n and as many columns as the data and target widths provided upon construction.

If n is not specified, than that value is taken from the number of rows in either data or target, whichever is provided. It is an error not to provide one of data, target or n.

If a random generator rng is provided, it must of the type bob.core.random.mt19937. In this case, the shuffler is going to use this generator instead of its internal one. This mechanism is useful for repeating draws in case of tests.

Independently if data and/or target is provided, this function will always return a tuple containing the data and target arrays with the random data picked from the user input. If either data or target are not provided by the user, then they are created internally and returned.

stdnorm() -> (mean, stddev)

Returns the standard normalisation parameters (mean and std. deviation) for the input data. Returns a tuple (mean, stddev), which are 1D float64 arrays with as many entries as o.data_width.

target_width

The number of components (i.e. the width) of target vectors

class bob.learn.mlp.Machine(shape)

Bases: object

Machine(config) Machine(other)

A Multi-layer Perceptron Machine.

An MLP Machine is a representation of a Multi-Layer Perceptron. This implementation is feed-forward and fully-connected. The implementation allows setting of input normalization values and a global activation function. References to fully-connected feed-forward networks:

Bishop’s Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning, Chapter 5. Figure 5.1 shows what is programmed.

MLPs normally are multi-layered systems, with 1 or more hidden layers. As a special case, this implementation also supports connecting the input directly to the output by means of a single weight matrix. This is equivalent of a bob.learn.linear.Machine, with the advantage it can be trained by trainers defined in this package.

An MLP can be constructed in different ways. In the first form, the user specifies the machine shape as sequence (e.g. a tuple). The sequence should contain the number of inputs (first element), number of outputs (last element) and the number of neurons in each hidden layer (elements between the first and last element of given tuple). The activation function will be set to hyperbolic tangent. The machine is remains uninitialized. In the second form the user passes a pre-opened HDF5 file pointing to the machine information to be loaded in memory. Finally, in the last form (copy constructor), the user passes another Machine that will be fully copied.

biases

Bias to the output units of this linear machine, to be added to the output before activation.

forward(input[, output]) → array

Projects input through its internal structure. If output is provided, place output there instead of allocating a new array.

The input (and output) arrays can be either 1D or 2D 64-bit float arrays. If one provides a 1D array, the output array, if provided, should also be 1D, matching the output size of this machine. If one provides a 2D array, it is considered a set of vertically stacked 1D arrays (one input per row) and a 2D array is produced or expected in output. The output array in this case shall have the same number of rows as the input array and as many columns as the output size for this machine.

Note

This method only accepts 64-bit float arrays as input or output.

hidden_activation

The hidden neurons activation function - by default, the hyperbolic tangent function. The current implementation only allows setting one global value for all hidden layers.

input_divide

Input division factor, before feeding data through the weight matrix W. The division is applied just after subtraction - by default, it is set to 1.0.

input_subtract

Input subtraction factor, before feeding data through the weight matrix W. The subtraction is the first applied operation in the processing chain - by default, it is set to 0.0.

is_similar_to(other[, r_epsilon=1e-5[, a_epsilon=1e-8]]) → bool

Compares this MLP with the other one to be approximately the same.

The optional values r_epsilon and a_epsilon refer to the relative and absolute precision for the weights, biases and any other values internal to this machine.

load(f) → None

Loads itself from a bob.io.base.HDF5File

output_activation

The output activation function - by default, the hyperbolic tangent function. The output provided by the output activation function is passed, unchanged, to the user.

randomize([lower_bound[, upper_bound[, rng]]]) → None

Resets parameters of this MLP using a random number generator.

Sets all weights and biases of this MLP, with random values between \([-0.1, 0.1)\) as advised in textbooks.

Values are drawn using boost::uniform_real class. The seed is picked using a time-based algorithm. Different calls spaced of at least 10 microseconds (machine clock) will be seeded differently. If lower and upper bound values are given, then new parameters are taken from [lower_bound, upper_bound), according to the boost::random documentation. The user may also pass the random number generator to be used. This allows you to set the seed to a specific value before randomizing the MLP parameters. If not set, this method will use an internal random number generator with a seed which is based on the current time.

save(f) → None

Saves itself at a bob.io.base.HDF5File

shape

A tuple that represents the size of the input vector followed by the size of the output vector in the format (input, output).

weights

Weight matrix to which the input is projected to. The output of the project is fed subject to bias and activation before being output.

class bob.learn.mlp.RProp(batch_size, cost[, trainer[, train_biases]]) → new RProp

Bases: bob.learn.mlp.Trainer

RProp(other) -> new RProp

Sets an MLP to perform discrimination based on RProp: A Direct Adaptive Method for Faster Backpropagation Learning: The RPROP Algorithm, by Martin Riedmiller and Heinrich Braun on IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks, pp. 586–591, 1993.

To create a new trainer, either pass the batch-size, cost functor, machine and a biases-training flag or another trainer you’d like the parameters copied from.

Note

RProp is a “batch” training algorithm. Do not try to set batch_size to a value which is too low.

Keyword parameters:

batch_size, int

The size of each batch used for the forward and backward steps. If you set this to 1, then you are implementing stochastic training.

Note

This setting affects the convergence.

cost, bob.learn.mlp.Cost
An object that can calculate the cost at every iteration.
machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
This parameter that will be used as a basis for this trainer’s internal properties (cache sizes, for instance).
train_biases, bool
A boolean indicating if we should train the biases weights (set it to True) or not (set it to False).
other, bob.learn.mlp.Trainer
Another trainer from which this new copy will get its properties from. If you use this constructor than a new (deep) copy of the trainer is created.
bias_deltas

Current settings for the bias update (\(\Delta_{ij}(t)\))

delta_max

Maximal weight update (defaults to 50.0)

delta_min

Minimal weight update (defaults to \(10^{-6}\))

delta_zero

Initial weight update (defaults to 0.1)

deltas

Current settings for the weight update (\(\Delta_{ij}(t)\))

eta_minus

Learning de-enforcement parameter (defaults to 0.5)

eta_plus

Learning enforcement parameter (defaults to 1.2)

previous_bias_derivatives

The derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific biases of the network, from the previous training step. The derivatives are arranged to match the organization of weights of the machine being trained.

previous_derivatives

The derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific weights of the network, from the previous training step. The derivatives are arranged to match the organization of weights of the machine being trained.

reset()

Re-initializes the whole training apparatus to start training a new machine. This will effectively reset previous derivatives to zero.

set_bias_delta()

Sets the bias delta for a given bias layer.

set_delta()

Sets the delta for a given weight layer.

set_previous_bias_derivative()

Sets the cost bias derivative for a given bias layer (index).

set_previous_derivative()

Sets the previous cost derivative for a given weight layer (index).

train(machine, input, target) → None

Trains the MLP to perform discrimination using RProp

Resilient Back-propagation (R-Prop) is an efficient algorithm for gradient descent with local adpatation of the weight updates, which adapts to the behaviour of the chosen error function.

Concretely, this executes the following update rule for the weights (and biases, optionally) and respective \(\Delta\)’s (the current weight updates):

\[\begin{split}\Delta_{ij}(t) &= \left\{ \begin{array}{l l} \text{min}(\eta^+\cdot\Delta_{ij}(t-1), \Delta_{\text{max}}) & \text{ if } \sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t-1)\cdot\sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t) > 0\\ \max(\eta^-\cdot\Delta_{ij}(t-1), \Delta_{\text{min}}) & \text{ if } \sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t-1)\cdot\sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t) < 0\\ \Delta_{ij}(t-1) & \text{ otherwise} \end{array} \right. \\ \Delta_{ij}w(t) &= \left\{ \begin{array}{l l} -\Delta_{ij}(t) & \text{ if } \sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t) > 0\\ +\Delta_{ij}(t) & \text{ if } \sum_{i=1}^{N}\frac{\partial J(x_i; \theta)}{\partial \theta_j}(t) < 0\\ 0 & \text{ otherwise} \end{array} \right. \\ w_{ij}(t+1) &= w_{ij}(t) + \Delta_{ij}(t)\end{split}\]

The following parameters are set by default and suggested by the article:

\[\begin{split}0 < \eta^- &< 1 < \eta^+\\ \eta^- &= 0.5\\ \eta^+ &= 1.2\\ \Delta_{0} &= 0.1\\ \Delta_{\text{min}} &= 10^{-6}\\ \Delta_{\text{max}} &= 50.0\end{split}\]

The training is executed outside the machine context, but uses all the current machine layout. The given machine is updated with new weights and biases at the end of the training that is performed a single time. Iterate as much as you want to refine the training.

The machine given as input is checked for compatibility with the current initialized settings. If the two are not compatible, an exception is thrown.

Note

In RProp, training is done in batches. You should set the batch size adequately at class initialization or use setBatchSize().

Note

The machine is not initialized randomly at each call to this method. It is your task to call bob.learn.mlp.Machine.randomize() once at the machine you want to train and then call this method as many times as you think are necessary. This design allows for a training criteria to be encoded outside the scope of this trainer and to this type to focus only on applying the training when requested to.

Keyword arguments:

machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
The machine that will be trained. You must have called bob.learn.mlp.Trainer.initialize() which a similarly configured machine before being able to call this method, or an exception may be thrown.
input, array-like, 2D with float64 as data type
A 2D numpy.ndarray with 64-bit floats containing the input data for the MLP to which this training step will be based on. The matrix should be organized so each input (example) lies on a single row of input.
target, array-like, 2D with float64 as data type
A 2D numpy.ndarray with 64-bit floats containing the target data for the MLP to which this training step will be based on. The matrix should be organized so each target lies on a single row of target, matching each input example in input.
class bob.learn.mlp.SquareError(actfun) → new SquareError functor

Bases: bob.learn.mlp.Cost

Calculates the Square-Error between output and target.

The square error is defined as follows:

\[J = \frac{(\hat{y} - y)^2}{2}\]

where \(\hat{y}\) is the output estimated by your machine and \(y\) is the expected output.

Keyword arguments:

actfun
The activation function object used at the last layer
class bob.learn.mlp.Trainer(batch_size, cost[, trainer[, train_biases]]) → new Trainer

Bases: object

Trainer(other) -> new Trainer

The base python class for MLP trainers based on cost derivatives.

You should use this class when you want to create your own MLP trainers and re-use the base infrastructured provided by this module, such as the computation of partial derivatives (using the backward_step() method).

To create a new trainer, either pass the batch-size, cost functor, machine and a biases-training flag or another trainer you’d like the parameters copied from.

Keyword parameters:

batch_size, int

The size of each batch used for the forward and backward steps. If you set this to 1, then you are implementing stochastic training.

Note

This setting affects the convergence.

cost, bob.learn.mlp.Cost
An object that can calculate the cost at every iteration.
machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
This parameter that will be used as a basis for this trainer’s internal properties (cache sizes, for instance).
train_biases, bool
A boolean indicating if we should train the biases weights (set it to True) or not (set it to False).
other, bob.learn.mlp.Trainer
Another trainer from which this new copy will get its properties from. If you use this constructor than a new (deep) copy of the trainer is created.
backward_step()

Backwards a batch of data through the MLP and updates the internal buffers (errors and derivatives).

batch_size

How many examples should be fed each time through the network for testing or training. This number reflects the internal sizes of structures setup to accomodate the input and the output of the network.

bias_derivatives

The calculated derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific biases of the network, organized to match the organization of biases of the machine being trained.

cost(target) → float

o.cost(machine, input, target) -> float

Calculates the cost for a given target.

The cost for a given target is defined as the sum of individual costs for every output in the current network, averaged over all the examples.

You can use this function in two ways. Either by initially calling forward_step() passing machine and input and then calling this method with just the target or passing all three objects in a single call. With the latter strategy, the forward_step() will be called internally.

This function returns a single scalar, of float type, representing the average cost for all input given the expected target.

cost_object

An object, derived from bob.learn.mlp.Cost (e.g. bob.learn.mlp.SquareError or bob.learn.mlp.CrossEntropyLoss), that is used to evaluate the cost (a.k.a. loss) and the derivatives given the input, the target and the MLP structure.

derivatives

The calculated derivatives of the cost w.r.t. to the specific weights of the network, organized to match the organization of weights of the machine being trained.

error

The error (a.k.a. \(\delta\)’s) back-propagated through the network, given an input and a target.

forward_step()

Forwards a batch of data through the MLP and updates the internal buffers.

hidden_layers()

The number of hidden layers on the target machine.

initialize()

Initialize the trainer with the given machine

is_compatible()

Checks if a given machine is compatible with inner settings

output

The outputs of each neuron in the network

set_bias_derivative()

Sets the cost derivative w.r.t. the biases for a given layer.

set_derivative()

Sets the cost derivative w.r.t. the weights for a given layer.

set_error()

Sets the error for a given layer in the network.

set_output()

Sets the output for a given layer in the network.

train_biases

A flag, indicating if this trainer will adjust the biases of the network

bob.learn.mlp.number_of_parameters(machine) → scalar

number_of_parameters(weights, biases) -> scalar

Returns the total number of parameters in an MLP.

Keyword parameters:

machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
Using the first call API, counts the total number of parameters in an MLP.
weights, sequence of 2D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 2D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the weights for the MLP you wish to count the parameters from.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

Other checks are disabled as this is considered an expert API. If you plan to unroll the weights and biases on a bob.learn.mlp.Machine, notice that in a given weights sequence the number of outputs in layer k must match the number of inputs on layer k+1 and the number of bias on layer k. In practice, you must assert that weights[k].shape[1] == weights[k+1].shape[0] and. that weights[k].shape[1] == bias[k].shape[0].

biases, sequence of 1D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 1D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the biases for the MLP you wish to number_of_parameters the parameters into.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

bob.learn.mlp.roll(machine, parameters) → parameters

roll(weights, biases, parameters) -> parameters

Roll the parameters (weights and biases) from a 64-bit float 1D array.

This function will roll the MLP machine weights and biases from a single 1D array of 64-bit floats. This procedure is useful for adapting generic optimization procedures for the task of training MLPs.

Keyword parameters:

machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
An MLP that will have its weights and biases rolled from a 1D array
weights, sequence of 2D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 2D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the weights for the MLP you wish to roll the parameters into using this argument.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

Other checks are disabled as this is considered an expert API. If you plan to roll the weights and biases on a bob.learn.mlp.Machine, notice that in a given weights sequence, the number of outputs in layer k must match the number of inputs on layer k+1 and the number of biases on layer k. In practice, you must assert that weights[k].shape[1] == weights[k+1].shape[0] and. that weights[k].shape[1] == bias[k].shape[0].

biases, sequence of 1D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 1D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the biases for the MLP you wish to roll the parameters into.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

parameters, 1D 64-bit float array

You may decide to pass the array in which the parameters will be placed using this variable. In this case, the size of the vector must match the total number of parameters available on the input machine or discrete weights and biases. If you decided to omit this parameter, then a vector with the appropriate size will be allocated internally and returned.

You can use py:func:number_of_parameters to calculate the total length of the required parameters vector, in case you wish to supply it.

bob.learn.mlp.unroll(machine[, parameters]) → parameters

unroll(weights, biases, [parameters]) -> parameters

Unroll the parameters (weights and biases) into a 64-bit float 1D array.

This function will unroll the MLP machine weights and biases into a single 1D array of 64-bit floats. This procedure is useful for adapting generic optimization procedures for the task of training MLPs.

Keyword parameters:

machine, bob.learn.mlp.Machine
An MLP that will have its weights and biases unrolled into a 1D array
weights, sequence of 2D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 2D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the weights for the MLP you wish to unroll.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

Other checks are disabled as this is considered an expert API. If you plan to unroll the weights and biases on a bob.learn.mlp.Machine, notice that in a given weights sequence, the number of outputs in layer k must match the number of inputs on layer k+1 and the number of biases on layer k. In practice, you must assert that weights[k].shape[1] == weights[k+1].shape[0] and. that weights[k].shape[1] == bias[k].shape[0].

biases, sequence of 1D 64-bit float arrays

If you choose the second calling strategy, then pass a sequence of 1D arrays of 64-bit floats representing the biases for the MLP you wish to unroll.

Note

In this case, both this sequence and biases must have the same length. This is the sole requirement.

parameters, 1D 64-bit float array

You may decide to pass the array in which the parameters will be placed using this variable. In this case, the size of the vector must match the total number of parameters available on the input machine or discrete weights and biases. If you decided to omit this parameter, then a vector with the appropriate size will be allocated internally and returned.

You can use py:func:number_of_parameters to calculate the total length of the required parameters vector, in case you wish to supply it.