Skip to content

⇅ Vector Features

Vector features enable providing an ordered set of numerical values within a single feature.

This is useful for providing pre-trained representations or activations obtained from other models or for providing multivariate inputs and outputs. An interesting use of vector features is the possibility of providing a probability distribution as output for a multiclass classification problem instead of a single correct class like with a category feature. Vector output features can also be useful for distillation and noise-aware losses.

Vector Feature Preprocessing

The data is expected as whitespace separated numerical values. Example: "1.0 0.0 1.04 10.49". All vectors are expected to be of the same size.

Preprocessing parameters:

  • vector_size (default null): size of the vector. If not provided, it will be inferred from the data.
  • missing_value_strategy (default fill_with_const): what strategy to follow when there's a missing value. The value should be one of fill_with_const (replaces the missing value with a specific value specified with the fill_value parameter), fill_with_mode (replaces the missing values with the most frequent value in the column), fill_with_mean (replaces the missing values with the mean of the values in the column), backfill (replaces the missing values with the next valid value).
  • fill_value (default ""): the value to replace the missing values with in case the missing_value_strategy is fill_with_const.

Vector Feature Encoders

The vector feature supports two encoders: dense and passthrough.

The available encoder parameters are:

  • tied (default null): name of the input feature to tie the weights of the encoder with. It needs to be the name of a feature of the same type and with the same encoder parameters.

Passthrough Encoder

There are no additional parameters for the passthrough encoder.

Dense Encoder

For vector features, a dense encoder (stack of fully connected layers) can be used to encode the vector. It takes the following parameters:

  • layers (default null): a list of dictionaries containing the parameters of all the fully connected layers. The length of the list determines the number of stacked fully connected layers and the content of each dictionary determines the parameters for a specific layer. The available parameters for each layer are: activation, dropout, norm, norm_params, output_size, use_bias, bias_initializer and weights_initializer. If any of those values is missing from the dictionary, the default one specified as a parameter of the encoder will be used instead. If both fc_layers and num_fc_layers are null, a default list will be assigned to fc_layers with the value [{output_size: 512}, {output_size: 256}] (only applies if reduce_output is not null).
  • num_layers (default 0): This is the number of stacked fully connected layers.
  • output_size (default 256): if a output_size is not already specified in fc_layers this is the default output_size that will be used for each layer. It indicates the size of the output of a fully connected layer.
  • use_bias (default true): boolean, whether the layer uses a bias vector.
  • weights_initializer (default 'glorot_uniform'): initializer for the weights matrix. Options are: constant, identity, zeros, ones, orthogonal, normal, uniform, truncated_normal, variance_scaling, glorot_normal, glorot_uniform, xavier_normal, xavier_uniform, he_normal, he_uniform, lecun_normal, lecun_uniform.
  • bias_initializer (default 'zeros'): initializer for the bias vector. Options are: constant, identity, zeros, ones, orthogonal, normal, uniform, truncated_normal, variance_scaling, glorot_normal, glorot_uniform, xavier_normal, xavier_uniform, he_normal, he_uniform, lecun_normal, lecun_uniform.
  • norm (default null): if a norm is not already specified in fc_layers this is the default norm that will be used for each layer. It indicates the norm of the output and it can be null, batch or layer.
  • norm_params (default null): parameters used if norm is either batch or layer. For information on parameters used with batch see Torch's documentation on batch normalization or for layer see Torch's documentation on layer normalization.
  • activation (default relu): if an activation is not already specified in fc_layers this is the default activation that will be used for each layer. It indicates the activation function applied to the output.
  • dropout (default 0): dropout rate

Example vector feature entry in the input features list using an dense encoder:

name: vector_column_name
type: vector
tied: null
encoder: dense
layers: null
num_layers: 0
output_size: 256
use_bias: true
weights_initializer: glorot_uniform
bias_initializer: zeros
norm: null
norm_params: null
activation: relu
dropout: 0

Vector Feature Decoders

name: vector_column_name
type: vector
reduce_input: sum
dependencies: []
reduce_dependencies: sum
loss:
    type: sigmoid_cross_entropy
fc_layers: null
num_fc_layers: 0
output_size: 256
use_bias: true
weights_initializer: glorot_uniform
bias_initializer: zeros
activation: relu
clip: null

Vector features can be used when multi-class classification needs to be performed with a noise-aware loss or when the task is multivariate regression.

There is only one decoder available for vector features: a (potentially empty) stack of fully connected layers, followed by a projection into a tensor of the vector size (optionally followed by a softmax in the case of multi-class classification).

+--------------+   +---------+   +-----------+
|Combiner      |   |Fully    |   |Projection |   +-------+
|Output        +--->Connected+--->into Vector+--->Softmax|
|Representation|   |Layers   |   |Size       |   +-------+
+--------------+   +---------+   +-----------+

These are the available parameters of the vector output feature.

  • reduce_input (default sum): defines how to reduce an input that is not a vector, but a matrix or a higher order tensor, on the first dimension (second if you count the batch dimension). Available values are: sum, mean or avg, max, concat (concatenates along the first dimension), last (returns the last vector of the first dimension).
  • dependencies (default []): the output features this one is dependent on. For a detailed explanation refer to Output Features Dependencies.
  • reduce_dependencies (default sum): defines how to reduce the output of a dependent feature that is not a vector, but a matrix or a higher order tensor, on the first dimension (second if you count the batch dimension). Available values are: sum, mean or avg, max, concat (concatenates along the first dimension), last (returns the last vector of the first dimension).
  • softmax (default false): determines if to apply a softmax at the end of the decoder. It is useful for predicting a vector of values that sum up to 1 and can be interpreted as probabilities.
  • loss (default {type: mean_squared_error}): is a dictionary containing a loss type. The available loss type are mean_squared_error, mean_absolute_error and softmax_cross_entropy (use it only if softmax is true).

These are the available parameters of a vector output feature decoder.

  • fc_layers (default null): a list of dictionaries containing the parameters of all the fully connected layers. The length of the list determines the number of stacked fully connected layers and the content of each dictionary determines the parameters for a specific layer. The available parameters for each layer are: activation, dropout, norm, norm_params, output_size, use_bias, bias_initializer and weights_initializer. If any of those values is missing from the dictionary, the default one specified as a parameter of the decoder will be used instead.
  • num_fc_layers (default 0): this is the number of stacked fully connected layers that the input to the feature passes through. Their output is projected in the feature's output space.
  • output_size (default 256): if a output_size is not already specified in fc_layers this is the default output_size that will be used for each layer. It indicates the size of the output of a fully connected layer.
  • use_bias (default true): boolean, whether the layer uses a bias vector.
  • weights_initializer (default 'glorot_uniform'): initializer for the weights matrix. Options are: constant, identity, zeros, ones, orthogonal, normal, uniform, truncated_normal, variance_scaling, glorot_normal, glorot_uniform, xavier_normal, xavier_uniform, he_normal, he_uniform, lecun_normal, lecun_uniform.
  • bias_initializer (default 'zeros'): initializer for the bias vector. Options are: constant, identity, zeros, ones, orthogonal, normal, uniform, truncated_normal, variance_scaling, glorot_normal, glorot_uniform, xavier_normal, xavier_uniform, he_normal, he_uniform, lecun_normal, lecun_uniform.
  • activation (default relu): if an activation is not already specified in fc_layers this is the default activation that will be used for each layer. It indicates the activation function applied to the output.
  • clip (default null): If not null it specifies a minimum and maximum value the predictions will be clipped to. The value can be either a list or a tuple of length 2, with the first value representing the minimum and the second the maximum. For instance (-5,5) will make it so that all predictions will be clipped in the [-5,5] interval.

Vector Features Measures

The metrics that are calculated every epoch and are available for set features are mean_squared_error, mean_absolute_error, r2, and the loss itself.

You can set any of them as validation_metric in the training section of the configuration if you set the validation_field to be the name of a vector feature.