Simple alternative Implementation of Prototypical Networks for Few Shot Learning (paper, code) in PyTorch.
As shown in the reference paper Prototypical Networks are trained to embed samples features in a vectorial space, in particular, at each episode (iteration), a number of samples for a subset of classes are selected and sent through the model, for each subset of class c
a number of samples' features (n_support
) are used to guess the prototype (their barycentre coordinates in the vectorial space) for that class, so then the distances between the remaining n_query
samples and their class barycentre can be minimized.
After training, you can compute the t-SNE for the features generated by the model (not done in this repo, more infos about t-SNE here), this is a sample as shown in the paper.
Kudos to @ludc for his contribute: https://github.com/pytorch/vision/pull/46. We will use the official dataset when it will be added to torchvision if it doesn't imply big changes to the code.
We implemented the Vynials splitting method as in [Matching Networks for One Shot Learning]. That sould be the same method used in the paper (in fact I download the split files from the "offical" repo). We then apply the same rotations there described. In this way we should be able to compare results obtained by running this code with results described in the reference paper.
As described in its PyDoc, this class is used to generate the indexes of each batch for a prototypical training algorithm.
In particular, the object is instantiated by passing the list of the labels for the dataset, the sampler infers then the total number of classes and creates a set of indexes for each class ni the dataset. At each episode the sampler selects n_classes
random classes and returns a number (n_support
+ n_query
) of samples indexes for each one of the selected classes.
Compute the loss as in the cited paper, mostly inspired by this code by one of its authors.
In prototypical_loss.py
both loss function and loss class à la PyTorch are implemented.
The function takes in input the batch input from the model, samples' ground truths and the number n_suppport
of samples to be used as support samples. Episode classes get infered from the target list, n_support
samples get randomly extracted for each class, their class barycentres get computed, as well as the distances of each remaining samples' embedding from each class barycentre and the probability of each sample of belonging to each episode class get finmally computed; then the loss is then computed from the wrong predictions probabilities (for the query samples) as usual in classification problems.
Please note that the training code is here just for demonstration purposes.
To train the Protonet on this task, cd into this repo's src
root folder and execute:
$ python train.py
The script takes the following command line options:
dataset_root
: the root directory where tha dataset is stored, default to '../dataset'
nepochs
: number of epochs to train for, default to 100
learning_rate
: learning rate for the model, default to 0.001
lr_scheduler_step
: StepLR learning rate scheduler step, default to 20
lr_scheduler_gamma
: StepLR learning rate scheduler gamma, default to 0.5
iterations
: number of episodes per epoch. default to 100
classes_per_it_tr
: number of random classes per episode for training. default to 60
num_support_tr
: number of samples per class to use as support for training. default to 5
num_query_tr
: nnumber of samples per class to use as query for training. default to 5
classes_per_it_val
: number of random classes per episode for validation. default to 5
num_support_val
: number of samples per class to use as support for validation. default to 5
num_query_val
: number of samples per class to use as query for validation. default to 15
manual_seed
: input for the manual seeds initializations, default to 7
cuda
: enables cuda (store True
)
Running the command without arguments will train the models with the default hyperparamters values (producing results shown above).
We are trying to reproduce the reference paper performaces, we'll update here our best results.
Model | 1-shot (5-way Acc.) | 5-shot (5-way Acc.) | 1 -shot (20-way Acc.) | 5-shot (20-way Acc.) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Reference Paper | 98.8% | 99.7% | 96.0% | 98.9% |
This repo | 98.5%** | 99.6%* | 95.1%° | 98.6%°° |
* achieved using default parameters (using --cuda
option)
** achieved running python train.py --cuda -nsTr 1 -nsVa 1
° achieved running python train.py --cuda -nsTr 1 -nsVa 1 -cVa 20
°° achieved running python train.py --cuda -nsTr 5 -nsVa 5 -cVa 20
cite the paper as follows (copied-pasted it from arxiv for you):
@article{DBLP:journals/corr/SnellSZ17,
author = {Jake Snell and
Kevin Swersky and
Richard S. Zemel},
title = {Prototypical Networks for Few-shot Learning},
journal = {CoRR},
volume = {abs/1703.05175},
year = {2017},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1703.05175},
archivePrefix = {arXiv},
eprint = {1703.05175},
timestamp = {Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:41:38 +0200},
biburl = {http://dblp.org/rec/bib/journals/corr/SnellSZ17},
bibsource = {dblp computer science bibliography, http://dblp.org}
}
This project is licensed under the MIT License
Copyright (c) 2018 Daniele E. Ciriello, Orobix Srl (www.orobix.com).