Thursday, April 27, 2017

Solving the Two Spirals problem with Keras

In this post we will see how to create a Multi Layer Perceptron (MLP), one of the most common Neural Network architectures, with Keras. Then, we'll train the MLP to tell apart points from two different spirals in the same space.
To have a sense of the problem, let's first generate the data to train the network:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

def twospirals(n_points, noise=.5):
    """
     Returns the two spirals dataset.
    """
    n = np.sqrt(np.random.rand(n_points,1)) * 780 * (2*np.pi)/360
    d1x = -np.cos(n)*n + np.random.rand(n_points,1) * noise
    d1y = np.sin(n)*n + np.random.rand(n_points,1) * noise
    return (np.vstack((np.hstack((d1x,d1y)),np.hstack((-d1x,-d1y)))), 
            np.hstack((np.zeros(n_points),np.ones(n_points))))

X, y = twospirals(1000)

plt.title('training set')
plt.plot(X[y==0,0], X[y==0,1], '.', label='class 1')
plt.plot(X[y==1,0], X[y==1,1], '.', label='class 2')
plt.legend()
plt.show()

As we can see, this dataset contains two different spirals. This kind of dataset has been named as Worst Dataset Ever!, indeed telling apart the points from the two spirals is not an easy part if your MLP is not sophisticated enough. Let's build a simple MLP with Keras and see what we can achieve:
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense

mymlp = Sequential()
mymlp.add(Dense(12, input_dim=2, activation='tanh'))
mymlp.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))

mymlp.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
              optimizer='rmsprop',
              metrics=['accuracy'])

# trains the model
mymlp.fit(X, y, epochs=150, batch_size=10,  verbose=0)
Here we created a Neural Network with the following structure: 2 inputs (the data is in a 2D space) fully connected to 12 hidden neurons and 1 output. Let's generate some test data and see if our model is able to classify them:
X_test, y_test = twospirals(1000)

yy = np.round(mymlp.predict(X_test).T[0])

plt.subplot(1,2,1)
plt.title('training set')
plt.plot(X[y==0,0], X[y==0,1], '.')
plt.plot(X[y==1,0], X[y==1,1], '.')
plt.subplot(1,2,2)
plt.title('Neural Network result')
plt.plot(X_test[yy==0,0], X_test[yy==0,1], '.')
plt.plot(X_test[yy==1,0], X_test[yy==1,1], '.')
plt.show()

We have the original train set on the left and the results of the Neural Network on the right. It's easy to note that the model misclassified most of the points on the test data. Let's add two hidden layers to our model and see what happens:
mymlp = Sequential()
mymlp.add(Dense(12, input_dim=2, activation='tanh'))
mymlp.add(Dense(12, activation='tanh'))
mymlp.add(Dense(12, activation='tanh'))
mymlp.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))

mymlp.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
              optimizer='rmsprop',
              metrics=['accuracy'])

# Fit the model
mymlp.fit(X, y, epochs=150, batch_size=10,  verbose=0)

yy = np.round(mymlp.predict(X_test).T[0])

plt.subplot(1,2,1)
plt.title('training set')
plt.plot(X[y==0,0], X[y==0,1], '.')
plt.plot(X[y==1,0], X[y==1,1], '.')
plt.subplot(1,2,2)
plt.title('Neural Network result')
plt.plot(X_test[yy==0,0], X_test[yy==0,1], '.')
plt.plot(X_test[yy==1,0], X_test[yy==1,1], '.')
plt.show()

The structure of our Network is now more suited to solve the problem and we see that most of the points used for the test were correctly classified.

3 comments:

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  3. FYI https://www.researchgate.net/publication/287229974_Learning_to_Tell_Two_Spirals_Apart

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