View Source Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors (Scholar v0.3.1)
The Radius Nearest Neighbors.
It implements both classification and regression.
Summary
Functions
Fit the Radius nearest neighbors classifier from the training data set.
Makes predictions with the given model
on inputs x
.
Return probability estimates for the test data x
.
Find the Radius neighbors of a point.
Functions
Fit the Radius nearest neighbors classifier from the training data set.
For classification, provided labels need to be consecutive non-negative integers. If your labels does
not meet this condition please use Scholar.Preprocessing.ordinal_encode
Currently 2D labels are only supported for regression tasks.
Options
:radius
- Radius of neighborhood The default value is1.0
.:num_classes
(pos_integer/0
) - Number of classes in provided labels:weights
- Weight function used in prediction. Possible values::uniform
- uniform weights. All points in each neighborhood are weighted equally.:distance
- weight points by the inverse of their distance. in this case, closer neighbors of a query point will have a greater influence than neighbors which are further away.
The default value is
:uniform
.:metric
- The function that measures the pairwise distance between two points. Possible values:{:minkowski, p}
- Minkowski metric. By changing value ofp
parameter (a positive number or:infinity
) we can set Manhattan (1
), Euclidean (2
), Chebyshev (:infinity
), or any arbitrary $L_p$ metric.:cosine
- Cosine metric.Anonymous function of arity 2 that takes two rank-2 tensors.
The default value is
&Scholar.Metrics.Distance.pairwise_minkowski/2
.:task
- Task that will be performed using Radius Nearest Neighbors. Possible values::classification
- Classifier implementing the Radius Nearest Neighbors vote.:regression
- Regression based on Radius Nearest Neighbors. The target is predicted by local interpolation of the targets associated of the nearest neighbors in the training set.
The default value is
:classification
.
Return Values
The function returns a struct with the following parameters:
:data
- Training data.:labels
- Labels of each point.:weights
- Weight function used in prediction.:num_classes
- Number of classes in provided labels.:task
- Task that will be performed using Radius Nearest Neighbors. For:classification
task, model will be a classifier implementing the Radius Nearest Neighbors vote. For:regression
task, model is a regressor based on Radius Nearest Neighbors.:metric
- The metric function used.:radius
- Radius of neighborhood.
Examples
iex> x = Nx.tensor([[1, 2], [2, 4], [1, 3], [2, 5]])
iex> y = Nx.tensor([1, 0, 1, 1])
iex> Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.fit(x, y, num_classes: 2)
%Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors{
data: Nx.tensor(
[
[1, 2],
[2, 4],
[1, 3],
[2, 5]
]
),
labels: Nx.tensor(
[1, 0, 1, 1]
),
weights: :uniform,
num_classes: 2,
task: :classification,
metric: &Scholar.Metrics.Distance.pairwise_minkowski/2,
radius: 1.0
}
Makes predictions with the given model
on inputs x
.
Return Values
It returns a tensor with predicted class labels.
Examples
iex> x = Nx.tensor([[1, 2], [2, 4], [1, 3], [2, 5]])
iex> y = Nx.tensor([1, 0, 1, 1])
iex> model = Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.fit(x, y, num_classes: 2)
iex> Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.predict(model, Nx.tensor([[1.9, 4.3], [1.1, 2.0]]))
Nx.tensor(
[0, 1]
)
Return probability estimates for the test data x
.
Return Values
It returns a typle with tensor with probabilities of classes and mask of outliers. They are arranged in lexicographic order.
Examples
iex> x = Nx.tensor([[1, 2], [2, 4], [1, 3], [2, 5]])
iex> y = Nx.tensor([1, 0, 1, 1])
iex> model = Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.fit(x, y, num_classes: 2)
iex> Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.predict_probability(model, Nx.tensor([[1.9, 4.3], [1.1, 2.0]]))
{Nx.tensor(
[
[0.5, 0.5],
[0.0, 1.0]
]
),
Nx.tensor(
[0, 0], type: :u8
)}
Find the Radius neighbors of a point.
Return Values
Returns indices of the selected neighbor points as a mask (1 if a point is a neighbor, 0 otherwise) and their respective distances.
Examples
iex> x = Nx.tensor([[1, 2], [2, 4], [1, 3], [2, 5]])
iex> y = Nx.tensor([1, 0, 1, 1])
iex> model = Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.fit(x, y, num_classes: 2)
iex> Scholar.Neighbors.RadiusNearestNeighbors.radius_neighbors(model, Nx.tensor([[1.9, 4.3], [1.1, 2.0]]))
{Nx.tensor(
[
[2.469818353652954, 0.3162313997745514, 1.5811394453048706, 0.7071067690849304],
[0.10000114142894745, 2.1931710243225098, 1.0049877166748047, 3.132091760635376]
]
),
Nx.tensor(
[
[0, 1, 0, 1],
[1, 0, 0, 0]
], type: :u8
)}