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05.07 In Depth: Support Vector Machines

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Support vector machines (SVMs) are a particularly powerful and flexible class of supervised algorithms for both classification and regression. In this section, we will develop the intuition behind support vector machines and their use in classification problems.
We begin with the standard imports:
python
%matplotlib inline
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from scipy import stats

# use seaborn plotting defaults
import seaborn as sns; sns.set()

Motivating Support Vector Machines

As part of our disussion of Bayesian classification (see In Depth: Naive Bayes Classification), we learned a simple model describing the distribution of each underlying class, and used these generative models to probabilistically determine labels for new points. That was an example of generative classification; here we will consider instead discriminative classification: rather than modeling each class, we simply find a line or curve (in two dimensions) or manifold (in multiple dimensions) that divides the classes from each other.
As an example of this, consider the simple case of a classification task, in which the two classes of points are well separated:
python
from sklearn.datasets.samples_generator import make_blobs
X, y = make_blobs(n_samples=50, centers=2,
                  random_state=0, cluster_std=0.60)
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn');
png
A linear discriminative classifier would attempt to draw a straight line separating the two sets of data, and thereby create a model for classification. For two dimensional data like that shown here, this is a task we could do by hand. But immediately we see a problem: there is more than one possible dividing line that can perfectly discriminate between the two classes!
We can draw them as follows:
python
xfit = np.linspace(-1, 3.5)
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
plt.plot([0.6], [2.1], 'x', color='red', markeredgewidth=2, markersize=10)

for m, b in [(1, 0.65), (0.5, 1.6), (-0.2, 2.9)]:
    plt.plot(xfit, m * xfit + b, '-k')

plt.xlim(-1, 3.5);
png
These are three very different separators which, nevertheless, perfectly discriminate between these samples. Depending on which you choose, a new data point (e.g., the one marked by the "X" in this plot) will be assigned a different label! Evidently our simple intuition of "drawing a line between classes" is not enough, and we need to think a bit deeper.

Support Vector Machines: Maximizing the Margin

Support vector machines offer one way to improve on this. The intuition is this: rather than simply drawing a zero-width line between the classes, we can draw around each line a margin of some width, up to the nearest point. Here is an example of how this might look:
python
xfit = np.linspace(-1, 3.5)
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')

for m, b, d in [(1, 0.65, 0.33), (0.5, 1.6, 0.55), (-0.2, 2.9, 0.2)]:
    yfit = m * xfit + b
    plt.plot(xfit, yfit, '-k')
    plt.fill_between(xfit, yfit - d, yfit + d, edgecolor='none',
                     color='#AAAAAA', alpha=0.4)

plt.xlim(-1, 3.5);
png
In support vector machines, the line that maximizes this margin is the one we will choose as the optimal model. Support vector machines are an example of such a maximum margin estimator.

Fitting a support vector machine

Let's see the result of an actual fit to this data: we will use Scikit-Learn's support vector classifier to train an SVM model on this data. For the time being, we will use a linear kernel and set the C parameter to a very large number (we'll discuss the meaning of these in more depth momentarily).
python
from sklearn.svm import SVC # "Support vector classifier"
model = SVC(kernel='linear', C=1E10)
model.fit(X, y)
SVC(C=10000000000.0, cache_size=200, class_weight=None, coef0=0.0, decision_function_shape=None, degree=3, gamma='auto', kernel='linear', max_iter=-1, probability=False, random_state=None, shrinking=True, tol=0.001, verbose=False)
To better visualize what's happening here, let's create a quick convenience function that will plot SVM decision boundaries for us:
python
def plot_svc_decision_function(model, ax=None, plot_support=True):
    """Plot the decision function for a 2D SVC"""
    if ax is None:
        ax = plt.gca()
    xlim = ax.get_xlim()
    ylim = ax.get_ylim()
    
    # create grid to evaluate model
    x = np.linspace(xlim[0], xlim[1], 30)
    y = np.linspace(ylim[0], ylim[1], 30)
    Y, X = np.meshgrid(y, x)
    xy = np.vstack([X.ravel(), Y.ravel()]).T
    P = model.decision_function(xy).reshape(X.shape)
    
    # plot decision boundary and margins
    ax.contour(X, Y, P, colors='k',
               levels=[-1, 0, 1], alpha=0.5,
               linestyles=['--', '-', '--'])
    
    # plot support vectors
    if plot_support:
        ax.scatter(model.support_vectors_[:, 0],
                   model.support_vectors_[:, 1],
                   s=300, linewidth=1, facecolors='none');
    ax.set_xlim(xlim)
    ax.set_ylim(ylim)
python
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
plot_svc_decision_function(model);
png
This is the dividing line that maximizes the margin between the two sets of points. Notice that a few of the training points just touch the margin: they are indicated by the black circles in this figure. These points are the pivotal elements of this fit, and are known as the support vectors, and give the algorithm its name. In Scikit-Learn, the identity of these points are stored in the support_vectors_ attribute of the classifier:
python
model.support_vectors_
array([[ 0.44359863, 3.11530945], [ 2.33812285, 3.43116792], [ 2.06156753, 1.96918596]])
A key to this classifier's success is that for the fit, only the position of the support vectors matter; any points further from the margin which are on the correct side do not modify the fit! Technically, this is because these points do not contribute to the loss function used to fit the model, so their position and number do not matter so long as they do not cross the margin.
We can see this, for example, if we plot the model learned from the first 60 points and first 120 points of this dataset:
python
def plot_svm(N=10, ax=None):
    X, y = make_blobs(n_samples=200, centers=2,
                      random_state=0, cluster_std=0.60)
    X = X[:N]
    y = y[:N]
    model = SVC(kernel='linear', C=1E10)
    model.fit(X, y)
    
    ax = ax or plt.gca()
    ax.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
    ax.set_xlim(-1, 4)
    ax.set_ylim(-1, 6)
    plot_svc_decision_function(model, ax)

fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 2, figsize=(16, 6))
fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.0625, right=0.95, wspace=0.1)
for axi, N in zip(ax, [60, 120]):
    plot_svm(N, axi)
    axi.set_title('N = {0}'.format(N))
png
In the left panel, we see the model and the support vectors for 60 training points. In the right panel, we have doubled the number of training points, but the model has not changed: the three support vectors from the left panel are still the support vectors from the right panel. This insensitivity to the exact behavior of distant points is one of the strengths of the SVM model.
If you are running this notebook live, you can use IPython's interactive widgets to view this feature of the SVM model interactively:
python
from ipywidgets import interact, fixed
interact(plot_svm, N=[10, 200], ax=fixed(None));
png

Beyond linear boundaries: Kernel SVM

Where SVM becomes extremely powerful is when it is combined with kernels. We have seen a version of kernels before, in the basis function regressions of In Depth: Linear Regression. There we projected our data into higher-dimensional space defined by polynomials and Gaussian basis functions, and thereby were able to fit for nonlinear relationships with a linear classifier.
In SVM models, we can use a version of the same idea. To motivate the need for kernels, let's look at some data that is not linearly separable:
python
from sklearn.datasets.samples_generator import make_circles
X, y = make_circles(100, factor=.1, noise=.1)

clf = SVC(kernel='linear').fit(X, y)

plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
plot_svc_decision_function(clf, plot_support=False);
png
It is clear that no linear discrimination will ever be able to separate this data. But we can draw a lesson from the basis function regressions in In Depth: Linear Regression, and think about how we might project the data into a higher dimension such that a linear separator would be sufficient. For example, one simple projection we could use would be to compute a radial basis function centered on the middle clump:
python
r = np.exp(-(X ** 2).sum(1))
We can visualize this extra data dimension using a three-dimensional plot—if you are running this notebook live, you will be able to use the sliders to rotate the plot:
python
from mpl_toolkits import mplot3d

def plot_3D(elev=30, azim=30, X=X, y=y):
    ax = plt.subplot(projection='3d')
    ax.scatter3D(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], r, c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
    ax.view_init(elev=elev, azim=azim)
    ax.set_xlabel('x')
    ax.set_ylabel('y')
    ax.set_zlabel('r')

interact(plot_3D, elev=[-90, 90], azip=(-180, 180),
         X=fixed(X), y=fixed(y));
png
We can see that with this additional dimension, the data becomes trivially linearly separable, by drawing a separating plane at, say, r=0.7.
Here we had to choose and carefully tune our projection: if we had not centered our radial basis function in the right location, we would not have seen such clean, linearly separable results. In general, the need to make such a choice is a problem: we would like to somehow automatically find the best basis functions to use.
One strategy to this end is to compute a basis function centered at every point in the dataset, and let the SVM algorithm sift through the results. This type of basis function transformation is known as a kernel transformation, as it is based on a similarity relationship (or kernel) between each pair of points.
A potential problem with this strategy—projecting NN points into NN dimensions—is that it might become very computationally intensive as NN grows large. However, because of a neat little procedure known as the kernel trick, a fit on kernel-transformed data can be done implicitly—that is, without ever building the full NN-dimensional representation of the kernel projection! This kernel trick is built into the SVM, and is one of the reasons the method is so powerful.
In Scikit-Learn, we can apply kernelized SVM simply by changing our linear kernel to an RBF (radial basis function) kernel, using the kernel model hyperparameter:
python
clf = SVC(kernel='rbf', C=1E6)
clf.fit(X, y)
SVC(C=1000000.0, cache_size=200, class_weight=None, coef0=0.0, decision_function_shape=None, degree=3, gamma='auto', kernel='rbf', max_iter=-1, probability=False, random_state=None, shrinking=True, tol=0.001, verbose=False)
python
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
plot_svc_decision_function(clf)
plt.scatter(clf.support_vectors_[:, 0], clf.support_vectors_[:, 1],
            s=300, lw=1, facecolors='none');
png
Using this kernelized support vector machine, we learn a suitable nonlinear decision boundary. This kernel transformation strategy is used often in machine learning to turn fast linear methods into fast nonlinear methods, especially for models in which the kernel trick can be used.

Tuning the SVM: Softening Margins

Our discussion thus far has centered around very clean datasets, in which a perfect decision boundary exists. But what if your data has some amount of overlap? For example, you may have data like this:
python
X, y = make_blobs(n_samples=100, centers=2,
                  random_state=0, cluster_std=1.2)
plt.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn');
png
To handle this case, the SVM implementation has a bit of a fudge-factor which "softens" the margin: that is, it allows some of the points to creep into the margin if that allows a better fit. The hardness of the margin is controlled by a tuning parameter, most often known as CC. For very large CC, the margin is hard, and points cannot lie in it. For smaller CC, the margin is softer, and can grow to encompass some points.
The plot shown below gives a visual picture of how a changing CC parameter affects the final fit, via the softening of the margin:
python
X, y = make_blobs(n_samples=100, centers=2,
                  random_state=0, cluster_std=0.8)

fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 2, figsize=(16, 6))
fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.0625, right=0.95, wspace=0.1)

for axi, C in zip(ax, [10.0, 0.1]):
    model = SVC(kernel='linear', C=C).fit(X, y)
    axi.scatter(X[:, 0], X[:, 1], c=y, s=50, cmap='autumn')
    plot_svc_decision_function(model, axi)
    axi.scatter(model.support_vectors_[:, 0],
                model.support_vectors_[:, 1],
                s=300, lw=1, facecolors='none');
    axi.set_title('C = {0:.1f}'.format(C), size=14)
png
The optimal value of the CC parameter will depend on your dataset, and should be tuned using cross-validation or a similar procedure (refer back to Hyperparameters and Model Validation).

Example: Face Recognition

As an example of support vector machines in action, let's take a look at the facial recognition problem. We will use the Labeled Faces in the Wild dataset, which consists of several thousand collated photos of various public figures. A fetcher for the dataset is built into Scikit-Learn:
python
from sklearn.datasets import fetch_lfw_people
faces = fetch_lfw_people(min_faces_per_person=60)
print(faces.target_names)
print(faces.images.shape)
['Ariel Sharon' 'Colin Powell' 'Donald Rumsfeld' 'George W Bush' 'Gerhard Schroeder' 'Hugo Chavez' 'Junichiro Koizumi' 'Tony Blair'] (1348, 62, 47)
Let's plot a few of these faces to see what we're working with:
python
fig, ax = plt.subplots(3, 5)
for i, axi in enumerate(ax.flat):
    axi.imshow(faces.images[i], cmap='bone')
    axi.set(xticks=[], yticks=[],
            xlabel=faces.target_names[faces.target[i]])
png
Each image contains [62×47] or nearly 3,000 pixels. We could proceed by simply using each pixel value as a feature, but often it is more effective to use some sort of preprocessor to extract more meaningful features; here we will use a principal component analysis (see In Depth: Principal Component Analysis) to extract 150 fundamental components to feed into our support vector machine classifier. We can do this most straightforwardly by packaging the preprocessor and the classifier into a single pipeline:
python
from sklearn.svm import SVC
from sklearn.decomposition import RandomizedPCA
from sklearn.pipeline import make_pipeline

pca = RandomizedPCA(n_components=150, whiten=True, random_state=42)
svc = SVC(kernel='rbf', class_weight='balanced')
model = make_pipeline(pca, svc)
For the sake of testing our classifier output, we will split the data into a training and testing set:
python
from sklearn.cross_validation import train_test_split
Xtrain, Xtest, ytrain, ytest = train_test_split(faces.data, faces.target,
                                                random_state=42)
Finally, we can use a grid search cross-validation to explore combinations of parameters. Here we will adjust C (which controls the margin hardness) and gamma (which controls the size of the radial basis function kernel), and determine the best model:
python
from sklearn.grid_search import GridSearchCV
param_grid = {'svc__C': [1, 5, 10, 50],
              'svc__gamma': [0.0001, 0.0005, 0.001, 0.005]}
grid = GridSearchCV(model, param_grid)

%time grid.fit(Xtrain, ytrain)
print(grid.best_params_)
CPU times: user 47.8 s, sys: 4.08 s, total: 51.8 s Wall time: 26 s {'svc__gamma': 0.001, 'svc__C': 10}
The optimal values fall toward the middle of our grid; if they fell at the edges, we would want to expand the grid to make sure we have found the true optimum.
Now with this cross-validated model, we can predict the labels for the test data, which the model has not yet seen:
python
model = grid.best_estimator_
yfit = model.predict(Xtest)
Let's take a look at a few of the test images along with their predicted values:
python
fig, ax = plt.subplots(4, 6)
for i, axi in enumerate(ax.flat):
    axi.imshow(Xtest[i].reshape(62, 47), cmap='bone')
    axi.set(xticks=[], yticks=[])
    axi.set_ylabel(faces.target_names[yfit[i]].split()[-1],
                   color='black' if yfit[i] == ytest[i] else 'red')
fig.suptitle('Predicted Names; Incorrect Labels in Red', size=14);
png
Out of this small sample, our optimal estimator mislabeled only a single face (Bush’s face in the bottom row was mislabeled as Blair). We can get a better sense of our estimator's performance using the classification report, which lists recovery statistics label by label:
python
from sklearn.metrics import classification_report
print(classification_report(ytest, yfit,
                            target_names=faces.target_names))
precision recall f1-score support
     Ariel Sharon       0.65      0.73      0.69        15
     Colin Powell       0.81      0.87      0.84        68
  Donald Rumsfeld       0.75      0.87      0.81        31
    George W Bush       0.93      0.83      0.88       126
Gerhard Schroeder       0.86      0.78      0.82        23
      Hugo Chavez       0.93      0.70      0.80        20
Junichiro Koizumi       0.80      1.00      0.89        12
       Tony Blair       0.83      0.93      0.88        42

      avg / total       0.85      0.85      0.85       337
We might also display the confusion matrix between these classes:
python
from sklearn.metrics import confusion_matrix
mat = confusion_matrix(ytest, yfit)
sns.heatmap(mat.T, square=True, annot=True, fmt='d', cbar=False,
            xticklabels=faces.target_names,
            yticklabels=faces.target_names)
plt.xlabel('true label')
plt.ylabel('predicted label');

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