sgd: Stochastic gradient descent

Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) References Examples

View source: R/sgd.R

Description

Run stochastic gradient descent in order to optimize the induced loss function given a model and data.

Usage

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sgd(x, ...)

## S3 method for class 'formula'
sgd(formula, data, model, model.control = list(),
  sgd.control = list(...), ...)

## S3 method for class 'matrix'
sgd(x, y, model, model.control = list(),
  sgd.control = list(...), ...)

## S3 method for class 'big.matrix'
sgd(x, y, model, model.control = list(),
  sgd.control = list(...), ...)

Arguments

x, y

a design matrix and the respective vector of outcomes.

...

arguments to be used to form the default sgd.control arguments if it is not supplied directly.

formula

an object of class "formula" (or one that can be coerced to that class): a symbolic description of the model to be fitted. The details can be found in "glm".

data

an optional data frame, list or environment (or object coercible by as.data.frame to a data frame) containing the variables in the model. If not found in data, the variables are taken from environment(formula), typically the environment from which glm is called.

model

character specifying the model to be used: "lm" (linear model), "glm" (generalized linear model), "cox" (Cox proportional hazards model), "gmm" (generalized method of moments), "m" (M-estimation). See ‘Details’.

model.control

a list of parameters for controlling the model.

family ("glm")

a description of the error distribution and link function to be used in the model. This can be a character string naming a family function, a family function or the result of a call to a family function. (See family for details of family functions.)

rank ("glm")

logical. Should the rank of the design matrix be checked?

fn ("gmm")

a function g(θ,x) which returns a k-vector corresponding to the k moment conditions. It is a required argument if gr not specified.

gr ("gmm")

a function to return the gradient. If unspecified, a finite-difference approximation will be used.

nparams ("gmm")

number of model parameters. This is automatically determined for other models.

type ("gmm")

character specifying the generalized method of moments procedure: "twostep" (Hansen, 1982), "iterative" (Hansen et al., 1996). Defaults to "iterative".

wmatrix ("gmm")

weighting matrix to be used in the loss function. Defaults to the identity matrix.

loss ("m")

character specifying the loss function to be used in the estimating equation. Default is the Huber loss.

lambda1

L1 regularization parameter. Default is 0.

lambda2

L2 regularization parameter. Default is 0.

sgd.control

an optional list of parameters for controlling the estimation.

method

character specifying the method to be used: "sgd", "implicit", "asgd", "ai-sgd", "momentum", "nesterov". Default is "ai-sgd". See ‘Details’.

lr

character specifying the learning rate to be used: "one-dim", "one-dim-eigen", "d-dim", "adagrad", "rmsprop". Default is "one-dim". See ‘Details’.

lr.control

vector of scalar hyperparameters one can set dependent on the learning rate. For hyperparameters aimed to be left as default, specify NA in the corresponding entries. See ‘Details’.

start

starting values for the parameter estimates. Default is random initialization around zero.

size

number of SGD estimates to store for diagnostic purposes (distributed log-uniformly over total number of iterations)

reltol

relative convergence tolerance. The algorithm stops if it is unable to change the relative mean squared difference in the parameters by more than the amount. Default is 1e-05.

npasses

the maximum number of passes over the data. Default is 3.

pass

logical. Should tol be ignored and run the algorithm for all of npasses?

shuffle

logical. Should the algorithm shuffle the data set including for each pass?

verbose

logical. Should the algorithm print progress?

Details

Models: The Cox model assumes that the survival data is ordered when passed in, i.e., such that the risk set of an observation i is all data points after it.

Methods:

sgd

stochastic gradient descent (Robbins and Monro, 1951)

implicit

implicit stochastic gradient descent (Toulis et al., 2014)

asgd

stochastic gradient with averaging (Polyak and Juditsky, 1992)

ai-sgd

implicit stochastic gradient with averaging (Toulis et al., 2015)

momentum

"classical" momentum (Polyak, 1964)

nesterov

Nesterov's accelerated gradient (Nesterov, 1983)

Learning rates and hyperparameters:

one-dim

scalar value prescribed in Xu (2011) as

a_n = scale * gamma/(1 + alpha*gamma*n)^(-c)

where the defaults are lr.control = (scale=1, gamma=1, alpha=1, c) where c is 1 if implemented without averaging, 2/3 if with averaging

one-dim-eigen

diagonal matrix lr.control = NULL

d-dim

diagonal matrix lr.control = (epsilon=1e-6)

adagrad

diagonal matrix prescribed in Duchi et al. (2011) as lr.control = (eta=1, epsilon=1e-6)

rmsprop

diagonal matrix prescribed in Tieleman and Hinton (2012) as lr.control = (eta=1, gamma=0.9, epsilon=1e-6)

Value

An object of class "sgd", which is a list containing the following components:

model

name of the model

coefficients

a named vector of coefficients

converged

logical. Was the algorithm judged to have converged?

estimates

estimates from algorithm stored at each iteration specified in pos

fitted.values

the fitted mean values

pos

vector of indices specifying the iteration number each estimate was stored for

residuals

the residuals, that is response minus fitted values

times

vector of times in seconds it took to complete the number of iterations specified in pos

model.out

a list of model-specific output attributes

Author(s)

Dustin Tran, Tian Lan, Panos Toulis, Ye Kuang, Edoardo Airoldi

References

John Duchi, Elad Hazan, and Yoram Singer. Adaptive subgradient methods for online learning and stochastic optimization. Journal of Machine Learning Research, 12:2121-2159, 2011.

Yurii Nesterov. A method for solving a convex programming problem with convergence rate O(1/k^2). Soviet Mathematics Doklady, 27(2):372-376, 1983.

Boris T. Polyak. Some methods of speeding up the convergence of iteration methods. USSR Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Physics, 4(5):1-17, 1964.

Boris T. Polyak and Anatoli B. Juditsky. Acceleration of stochastic approximation by averaging. SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, 30(4):838-855, 1992.

Herbert Robbins and Sutton Monro. A stochastic approximation method. The Annals of Mathematical Statistics, pp. 400-407, 1951.

Panos Toulis, Jason Rennie, and Edoardo M. Airoldi, "Statistical analysis of stochastic gradient methods for generalized linear models", In Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Machine Learning, 2014.

Panos Toulis, Dustin Tran, and Edoardo M. Airoldi, "Stability and optimality in stochastic gradient descent", arXiv preprint arXiv:1505.02417, 2015.

Wei Xu. Towards optimal one pass large scale learning with averaged stochastic gradient descent. arXiv preprint arXiv:1107.2490, 2011.

# Dimensions

Examples

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## Linear regression
set.seed(42)
N <- 1e4
d <- 5
X <- matrix(rnorm(N*d), ncol=d)
theta <- rep(5, d+1)
eps <- rnorm(N)
y <- cbind(1, X) %*% theta + eps
dat <- data.frame(y=y, x=X)
sgd.theta <- sgd(y ~ ., data=dat, model="lm")
sprintf("Mean squared error: %0.3f", mean((theta - as.numeric(sgd.theta$coefficients))^2))

sgd documentation built on July 13, 2019, 1:06 a.m.

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