.. _sgd:

===========================
Stochastic Gradient Descent
===========================

.. currentmodule:: sklearn.linear_model

**Stochastic Gradient Descent (SGD)** is a simple yet very efficient
approach to discriminative learning of linear classifiers under
convex loss functions such as (linear) `Support Vector Machines
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Support_vector_machine>`_ and `Logistic
Regression <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_regression>`_.
Even though SGD has been around in the machine learning community for
a long time, it has received a considerable amount of attention just
recently in the context of large-scale learning.

SGD has been successfully applied to large-scale and sparse machine
learning problems often encountered in text classification and natural
language processing.  Given that the data is sparse, the classifiers
in this module easily scale to problems with more than 10^5 training
examples and more than 10^5 features.

The advantages of Stochastic Gradient Descent are:

    + Efficiency.

    + Ease of implementation (lots of opportunities for code tuning).

The disadvantages of Stochastic Gradient Descent include:

    + SGD requires a number of hyperparameters such as the regularization
      parameter and the number of iterations.

    + SGD is sensitive to feature scaling.

Classification
==============

.. warning::

  Make sure you permute (shuffle) your training data before fitting the
  model or use ``shuffle=True`` to shuffle after each iterations.

The class :class:`SGDClassifier` implements a plain stochastic gradient
descent learning routine which supports different loss functions and
penalties for classification.

.. figure:: ../auto_examples/linear_model/images/plot_sgd_separating_hyperplane_001.png
   :target: ../auto_examples/linear_model/plot_sgd_separating_hyperplane.html
   :align: center
   :scale: 75

As other classifiers, SGD has to be fitted with two arrays: an array X
of size [n_samples, n_features] holding the training samples, and an
array Y of size [n_samples] holding the target values (class labels)
for the training samples::

    >>> from sklearn.linear_model import SGDClassifier
    >>> X = [[0., 0.], [1., 1.]]
    >>> y = [0, 1]
    >>> clf = SGDClassifier(loss="hinge", penalty="l2")
    >>> clf.fit(X, y)
    SGDClassifier(alpha=0.0001, average=False, class_weight=None, epsilon=0.1,
           eta0=0.0, fit_intercept=True, l1_ratio=0.15,
           learning_rate='optimal', loss='hinge', n_iter=5, n_jobs=1,
           penalty='l2', power_t=0.5, random_state=None, shuffle=True,
           verbose=0, warm_start=False)


After being fitted, the model can then be used to predict new values::

    >>> clf.predict([[2., 2.]])
    array([1])

SGD fits a linear model to the training data. The member ``coef_`` holds
the model parameters::

    >>> clf.coef_                                         # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
    array([[ 9.9...,  9.9...]])

Member ``intercept_`` holds the intercept (aka offset or bias)::

    >>> clf.intercept_                                    # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
    array([-9.9...])

Whether or not the model should use an intercept, i.e. a biased
hyperplane, is controlled by the parameter ``fit_intercept``.

To get the signed distance to the hyperplane use :meth:`SGDClassifier.decision_function`::

    >>> clf.decision_function([[2., 2.]])                 # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
    array([ 29.6...])

The concrete loss function can be set via the ``loss``
parameter. :class:`SGDClassifier` supports the following loss functions:

  * ``loss="hinge"``: (soft-margin) linear Support Vector Machine,
  * ``loss="modified_huber"``: smoothed hinge loss,
  * ``loss="log"``: logistic regression,
  * and all regression losses below.

The first two loss functions are lazy, they only update the model
parameters if an example violates the margin constraint, which makes
training very efficient and may result in sparser models, even when L2 penalty
is used.

Using ``loss="log"`` or ``loss="modified_huber"`` enables the
``predict_proba`` method, which gives a vector of probability estimates
:math:`P(y|x)` per sample :math:`x`::

    >>> clf = SGDClassifier(loss="log").fit(X, y)
    >>> clf.predict_proba([[1., 1.]])                      # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
    array([[ 0.00...,  0.99...]])

The concrete penalty can be set via the ``penalty`` parameter.
SGD supports the following penalties:

  * ``penalty="l2"``: L2 norm penalty on ``coef_``.
  * ``penalty="l1"``: L1 norm penalty on ``coef_``.
  * ``penalty="elasticnet"``: Convex combination of L2 and L1;
    ``(1 - l1_ratio) * L2 + l1_ratio * L1``.

The default setting is ``penalty="l2"``. The L1 penalty leads to sparse
solutions, driving most coefficients to zero. The Elastic Net solves
some deficiencies of the L1 penalty in the presence of highly correlated
attributes. The parameter ``l1_ratio`` controls the convex combination
of L1 and L2 penalty.

:class:`SGDClassifier` supports multi-class classification by combining
multiple binary classifiers in a "one versus all" (OVA) scheme. For each
of the :math:`K` classes, a binary classifier is learned that discriminates
between that and all other :math:`K-1` classes. At testing time, we compute the
confidence score (i.e. the signed distances to the hyperplane) for each
classifier and choose the class with the highest confidence. The Figure
below illustrates the OVA approach on the iris dataset.  The dashed
lines represent the three OVA classifiers; the background colors show
the decision surface induced by the three classifiers.

.. figure:: ../auto_examples/linear_model/images/plot_sgd_iris_001.png
   :target: ../auto_examples/linear_model/plot_sgd_iris.html
   :align: center
   :scale: 75

In the case of multi-class classification ``coef_`` is a two-dimensionally
array of ``shape=[n_classes, n_features]`` and ``intercept_`` is a one
dimensional array of ``shape=[n_classes]``. The i-th row of ``coef_`` holds
the weight vector of the OVA classifier for the i-th class; classes are
indexed in ascending order (see attribute ``classes_``).
Note that, in principle, since they allow to create a probability model,
``loss="log"`` and ``loss="modified_huber"`` are more suitable for
one-vs-all classification.

:class:`SGDClassifier` supports both weighted classes and weighted
instances via the fit parameters ``class_weight`` and ``sample_weight``. See
the examples below and the doc string of :meth:`SGDClassifier.fit` for
further information.

.. topic:: Examples:

 - :ref:`example_linear_model_plot_sgd_separating_hyperplane.py`,
 - :ref:`example_linear_model_plot_sgd_iris.py`
 - :ref:`example_linear_model_plot_sgd_weighted_samples.py`
 - :ref:`example_svm_plot_separating_hyperplane_unbalanced.py` (See the `Note`)

:class:`SGDClassifier` supports averaged SGD (ASGD). Averaging can be enabled
by setting ```average=True```. ASGD works by averaging the coefficients
of the plain SGD over each iteration over a sample. When using ASGD
the learning rate can be larger and even constant leading on some
datasets to a speed up in training time.

Regression
==========

The class :class:`SGDRegressor` implements a plain stochastic gradient
descent learning routine which supports different loss functions and
penalties to fit linear regression models. :class:`SGDRegressor` is
well suited for regression problems with a large number of training
samples (> 10.000), for other problems we recommend :class:`Ridge`,
:class:`Lasso`, or :class:`ElasticNet`.

The concrete loss function can be set via the ``loss``
parameter. :class:`SGDRegressor` supports the following loss functions:

  * ``loss="squared_loss"``: Ordinary least squares,
  * ``loss="huber"``: Huber loss for robust regression,
  * ``loss="epsilon_insensitive"``: linear Support Vector Regression.

The Huber and epsilon-insensitive loss functions can be used for
robust regression. The width of the insensitive region has to be
specified via the parameter ``epsilon``. This parameter depends on the
scale of the target variables.

:class:`SGDRegressor` supports averaged SGD as :class:`SGDClassifier`.
Averaging can be enabled by setting ```average=True```


Stochastic Gradient Descent for sparse data
===========================================

.. note:: The sparse implementation produces slightly different results
  than the dense implementation due to a shrunk learning rate for the
  intercept.

There is built-in support for sparse data given in any matrix in a format
supported by `scipy.sparse <http://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/generated/scipy.sparse.html>`_. For maximum efficiency, however, use the CSR
matrix format as defined in `scipy.sparse.csr_matrix
<http://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/generated/scipy.sparse.csr_matrix.html>`_.

.. topic:: Examples:

 - :ref:`example_text_document_classification_20newsgroups.py`

Complexity
==========

The major advantage of SGD is its efficiency, which is basically
linear in the number of training examples. If X is a matrix of size (n, p)
training has a cost of :math:`O(k n \bar p)`, where k is the number
of iterations (epochs) and :math:`\bar p` is the average number of
non-zero attributes per sample.

Recent theoretical results, however, show that the runtime to get some
desired optimization accuracy does not increase as the training set size increases.

Tips on Practical Use
=====================

  * Stochastic Gradient Descent is sensitive to feature scaling, so it
    is highly recommended to scale your data. For example, scale each
    attribute on the input vector X to [0,1] or [-1,+1], or standardize
    it to have mean 0 and variance 1. Note that the *same* scaling
    must be applied to the test vector to obtain meaningful
    results. This can be easily done using :class:`StandardScaler`::

      from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler
      scaler = StandardScaler()
      scaler.fit(X_train)  # Don't cheat - fit only on training data
      X_train = scaler.transform(X_train)
      X_test = scaler.transform(X_test)  # apply same transformation to test data

    If your attributes have an intrinsic scale (e.g. word frequencies or
    indicator features) scaling is not needed.

  * Finding a reasonable regularization term :math:`\alpha` is
    best done using :class:`GridSearchCV`, usually in the
    range ``10.0**-np.arange(1,7)``.

  * Empirically, we found that SGD converges after observing
    approx. 10^6 training samples. Thus, a reasonable first guess
    for the number of iterations is ``n_iter = np.ceil(10**6 / n)``,
    where ``n`` is the size of the training set.

  * If you apply SGD to features extracted using PCA we found that
    it is often wise to scale the feature values by some constant `c`
    such that the average L2 norm of the training data equals one.

  * We found that Averaged SGD works best with a larger number of features
    and a higher eta0

.. topic:: References:

 * `"Efficient BackProp" <yann.lecun.com/exdb/publis/pdf/lecun-98b.pdf>`_
   Y. LeCun, L. Bottou, G. Orr, K. Müller - In Neural Networks: Tricks
   of the Trade 1998.

.. _sgd_mathematical_formulation:

Mathematical formulation
========================

Given a set of training examples :math:`(x_1, y_1), \ldots, (x_n, y_n)` where
:math:`x_i \in \mathbf{R}^n` and :math:`y_i \in \{-1,1\}`, our goal is to
learn a linear scoring function :math:`f(x) = w^T x + b` with model parameters
:math:`w \in \mathbf{R}^m` and intercept :math:`b \in \mathbf{R}`. In order
to make predictions, we simply look at the sign of :math:`f(x)`.
A common choice to find the model parameters is by minimizing the regularized
training error given by

.. math::

    E(w,b) = \frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=1}^{n} L(y_i, f(x_i)) + \alpha R(w)

where :math:`L` is a loss function that measures model (mis)fit and
:math:`R` is a regularization term (aka penalty) that penalizes model
complexity; :math:`\alpha > 0` is a non-negative hyperparameter.

Different choices for :math:`L` entail different classifiers such as

   - Hinge: (soft-margin) Support Vector Machines.
   - Log:   Logistic Regression.
   - Least-Squares: Ridge Regression.
   - Epsilon-Insensitive: (soft-margin) Support Vector Regression.

All of the above loss functions can be regarded as an upper bound on the
misclassification error (Zero-one loss) as shown in the Figure below.

.. figure:: ../auto_examples/linear_model/images/plot_sgd_loss_functions_001.png
    :target: ../auto_examples/linear_model/plot_sgd_loss_functions.html
    :align: center
    :scale: 75

Popular choices for the regularization term :math:`R` include:

   - L2 norm: :math:`R(w) := \frac{1}{2} \sum_{i=1}^{n} w_i^2`,
   - L1 norm: :math:`R(w) := \sum_{i=1}^{n} |w_i|`, which leads to sparse
     solutions.
   - Elastic Net: :math:`R(w) := \frac{\rho}{2} \sum_{i=1}^{n} w_i^2 + (1-\rho) \sum_{i=1}^{n} |w_i|`, a convex combination of L2 and L1, where :math:`\rho` is given by ``1 - l1_ratio``.

The Figure below shows the contours of the different regularization terms
in the parameter space when :math:`R(w) = 1`.

.. figure:: ../auto_examples/linear_model/images/plot_sgd_penalties_001.png
    :target: ../auto_examples/linear_model/plot_sgd_penalties.html
    :align: center
    :scale: 75

SGD
---

Stochastic gradient descent is an optimization method for unconstrained
optimization problems. In contrast to (batch) gradient descent, SGD
approximates the true gradient of :math:`E(w,b)` by considering a
single training example at a time.

The class :class:`SGDClassifier` implements a first-order SGD learning
routine.  The algorithm iterates over the training examples and for each
example updates the model parameters according to the update rule given by

.. math::

    w \leftarrow w - \eta (\alpha \frac{\partial R(w)}{\partial w}
    + \frac{\partial L(w^T x_i + b, y_i)}{\partial w})

where :math:`\eta` is the learning rate which controls the step-size in
the parameter space.  The intercept :math:`b` is updated similarly but
without regularization.

The learning rate :math:`\eta` can be either constant or gradually decaying. For
classification, the default learning rate schedule (``learning_rate='optimal'``)
is given by

.. math::

    \eta^{(t)} = \frac {1}{\alpha  (t_0 + t)}

where :math:`t` is the time step (there are a total of `n_samples * n_iter`
time steps), :math:`t_0` is determined based on a heuristic proposed by Léon Bottou
such that the expected initial updates are comparable with the expected
size of the weights (this assuming that the norm of the training samples is
approx. 1). The exact definition can be found in ``_init_t`` in :class:`BaseSGD`.


For regression the default learning rate schedule is inverse scaling
(``learning_rate='invscaling'``), given by

.. math::

    \eta^{(t)} = \frac{eta_0}{t^{power\_t}}

where :math:`eta_0` and :math:`power\_t` are hyperparameters chosen by the
user via ``eta0`` and ``power_t``, resp.

For a constant learning rate use ``learning_rate='constant'`` and use ``eta0``
to specify the learning rate.

The model parameters can be accessed through the members ``coef_`` and
``intercept_``:

     - Member ``coef_`` holds the weights :math:`w`

     - Member ``intercept_`` holds :math:`b`

.. topic:: References:

 * `"Solving large scale linear prediction problems using stochastic
   gradient descent algorithms"
   <http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.58.7377>`_
   T. Zhang - In Proceedings of ICML '04.

 * `"Regularization and variable selection via the elastic net"
   <http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.124.4696>`_
   H. Zou, T. Hastie - Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B,
   67 (2), 301-320.

 * `"Towards Optimal One Pass Large Scale Learning with
   Averaged Stochastic Gradient Descent"
   <http://arxiv.org/pdf/1107.2490v2.pdf>`_
   Xu, Wei


Implementation details
======================

The implementation of SGD is influenced by the `Stochastic Gradient SVM
<http://leon.bottou.org/projects/sgd>`_  of Léon Bottou. Similar to SvmSGD,
the weight vector is represented as the product of a scalar and a vector
which allows an efficient weight update in the case of L2 regularization.
In the case of sparse feature vectors, the intercept is updated with a
smaller learning rate (multiplied by 0.01) to account for the fact that
it is updated more frequently. Training examples are picked up sequentially
and the learning rate is lowered after each observed example. We adopted the
learning rate schedule from Shalev-Shwartz et al. 2007.
For multi-class classification, a "one versus all" approach is used.
We use the truncated gradient algorithm proposed by Tsuruoka et al. 2009
for L1 regularization (and the Elastic Net).
The code is written in Cython.

.. topic:: References:

 * `"Stochastic Gradient Descent" <http://leon.bottou.org/projects/sgd>`_ L. Bottou - Website, 2010.

 * `"The Tradeoffs of Large Scale Machine Learning" <http://leon.bottou.org/slides/largescale/lstut.pdf>`_ L. Bottou - Website, 2011.

 * `"Pegasos: Primal estimated sub-gradient solver for svm"
   <http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.74.8513>`_
   S. Shalev-Shwartz, Y. Singer, N. Srebro - In Proceedings of ICML '07.

 * `"Stochastic gradient descent training for l1-regularized log-linear models with cumulative penalty"
   <http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P09/P09-1054.pdf>`_
   Y. Tsuruoka, J. Tsujii, S. Ananiadou -  In Proceedings of the AFNLP/ACL '09.