Posit AI Weblog: Illustration studying with MMD-VAE


Lately, we confirmed easy methods to generate photos utilizing generative adversarial networks (GANs). GANs might yield wonderful outcomes, however the contract there principally is: what you see is what you get.
Typically this can be all we wish. In different instances, we could also be extra enthusiastic about really modelling a site. We don’t simply need to generate realistic-looking samples – we wish our samples to be positioned at particular coordinates in area area.

For instance, think about our area to be the area of facial expressions. Then our latent area is perhaps conceived as two-dimensional: In accordance with underlying emotional states, expressions fluctuate on a positive-negative scale. On the similar time, they fluctuate in depth. Now if we skilled a VAE on a set of facial expressions adequately masking the ranges, and it did the truth is “uncover” our hypothesized dimensions, we might then use it to generate previously-nonexisting incarnations of factors (faces, that’s) in latent area.

Variational autoencoders are just like probabilistic graphical fashions in that they assume a latent area that’s answerable for the observations, however unobservable. They’re just like plain autoencoders in that they compress, after which decompress once more, the enter area. In distinction to plain autoencoders although, the essential level right here is to plot a loss perform that permits to acquire informative representations in latent area.

In a nutshell

In normal VAEs (Kingma and Welling 2013), the target is to maximise the proof decrease sure (ELBO):

[ELBO = E[log p(x|z)] – KL(q(z)||p(z))]

In plain phrases and expressed when it comes to how we use it in observe, the primary element is the reconstruction loss we additionally see in plain (non-variational) autoencoders. The second is the Kullback-Leibler divergence between a previous imposed on the latent area (usually, a typical regular distribution) and the illustration of latent area as discovered from the information.

A significant criticism relating to the normal VAE loss is that it leads to uninformative latent area. Options embody (beta)-VAE(Burgess et al. 2018), Information-VAE (Zhao, Music, and Ermon 2017), and extra. The MMD-VAE(Zhao, Music, and Ermon 2017) applied beneath is a subtype of Information-VAE that as an alternative of creating every illustration in latent area as related as doable to the prior, coerces the respective distributions to be as shut as doable. Right here MMD stands for most imply discrepancy, a similarity measure for distributions primarily based on matching their respective moments. We clarify this in additional element beneath.

Our goal immediately

On this put up, we’re first going to implement a typical VAE that strives to maximise the ELBO. Then, we examine its efficiency to that of an Information-VAE utilizing the MMD loss.

Our focus shall be on inspecting the latent areas and see if, and the way, they differ as a consequence of the optimization standards used.

The area we’re going to mannequin shall be glamorous (style!), however for the sake of manageability, confined to dimension 28 x 28: We’ll compress and reconstruct photos from the Vogue MNIST dataset that has been developed as a drop-in to MNIST.

A typical variational autoencoder

Seeing we haven’t used TensorFlow keen execution for some weeks, we’ll do the mannequin in an keen approach.
In case you’re new to keen execution, don’t fear: As each new approach, it wants some getting accustomed to, however you’ll rapidly discover that many duties are made simpler for those who use it. A easy but full, template-like instance is on the market as a part of the Keras documentation.

Setup and information preparation

As normal, we begin by ensuring we’re utilizing the TensorFlow implementation of Keras and enabling keen execution. Moreover tensorflow and keras, we additionally load tfdatasets to be used in information streaming.

By the best way: No have to copy-paste any of the beneath code snippets. The 2 approaches can be found amongst our Keras examples, specifically, as eager_cvae.R and mmd_cvae.R.

The info comes conveniently with keras, all we have to do is the same old normalization and reshaping.

style <- dataset_fashion_mnist()

c(train_images, train_labels) %<-% style$practice
c(test_images, test_labels) %<-% style$take a look at

train_x <- train_images %>%
  `/`(255) %>%
  k_reshape(c(60000, 28, 28, 1))

test_x <- test_images %>% `/`(255) %>%
  k_reshape(c(10000, 28, 28, 1))

What do we’d like the take a look at set for, given we’re going to practice an unsupervised (a greater time period being: semi-supervised) mannequin? We’ll use it to see how (beforehand unknown) information factors cluster collectively in latent area.

Now put together for streaming the information to keras:

buffer_size <- 60000
batch_size <- 100
batches_per_epoch <- buffer_size / batch_size

train_dataset <- tensor_slices_dataset(train_x) %>%
  dataset_shuffle(buffer_size) %>%
  dataset_batch(batch_size)

test_dataset <- tensor_slices_dataset(test_x) %>%
  dataset_batch(10000)

Subsequent up is defining the mannequin.

Encoder-decoder mannequin

The mannequin actually is 2 fashions: the encoder and the decoder. As we’ll see shortly, in the usual model of the VAE there’s a third element in between, performing the so-called reparameterization trick.

The encoder is a customized mannequin, comprised of two convolutional layers and a dense layer. It returns the output of the dense layer cut up into two elements, one storing the imply of the latent variables, the opposite their variance.

latent_dim <- 2

encoder_model <- perform(title = NULL) {
  
  keras_model_custom(title = title, perform(self) {
    self$conv1 <-
      layer_conv_2d(
        filters = 32,
        kernel_size = 3,
        strides = 2,
        activation = "relu"
      )
    self$conv2 <-
      layer_conv_2d(
        filters = 64,
        kernel_size = 3,
        strides = 2,
        activation = "relu"
      )
    self$flatten <- layer_flatten()
    self$dense <- layer_dense(models = 2 * latent_dim)
    
    perform (x, masks = NULL) {
      x %>%
        self$conv1() %>%
        self$conv2() %>%
        self$flatten() %>%
        self$dense() %>%
        tf$cut up(num_or_size_splits = 2L, axis = 1L) 
    }
  })
}

We select the latent area to be of dimension 2 – simply because that makes visualization straightforward.
With extra advanced information, you’ll most likely profit from selecting a better dimensionality right here.

So the encoder compresses actual information into estimates of imply and variance of the latent area.
We then “not directly” pattern from this distribution (the so-called reparameterization trick):

reparameterize <- perform(imply, logvar) {
  eps <- k_random_normal(form = imply$form, dtype = tf$float64)
  eps * k_exp(logvar * 0.5) + imply
}

The sampled values will function enter to the decoder, who will try and map them again to the unique area.
The decoder is principally a sequence of transposed convolutions, upsampling till we attain a decision of 28×28.

decoder_model <- perform(title = NULL) {
  
  keras_model_custom(title = title, perform(self) {
    
    self$dense <- layer_dense(models = 7 * 7 * 32, activation = "relu")
    self$reshape <- layer_reshape(target_shape = c(7, 7, 32))
    self$deconv1 <-
      layer_conv_2d_transpose(
        filters = 64,
        kernel_size = 3,
        strides = 2,
        padding = "similar",
        activation = "relu"
      )
    self$deconv2 <-
      layer_conv_2d_transpose(
        filters = 32,
        kernel_size = 3,
        strides = 2,
        padding = "similar",
        activation = "relu"
      )
    self$deconv3 <-
      layer_conv_2d_transpose(
        filters = 1,
        kernel_size = 3,
        strides = 1,
        padding = "similar"
      )
    
    perform (x, masks = NULL) {
      x %>%
        self$dense() %>%
        self$reshape() %>%
        self$deconv1() %>%
        self$deconv2() %>%
        self$deconv3()
    }
  })
}

Observe how the ultimate deconvolution doesn’t have the sigmoid activation you might need anticipated. It is because we shall be utilizing tf$nn$sigmoid_cross_entropy_with_logits when calculating the loss.

Talking of losses, let’s examine them now.

Loss calculations

One technique to implement the VAE loss is combining reconstruction loss (cross entropy, within the current case) and Kullback-Leibler divergence. In Keras, the latter is on the market instantly as loss_kullback_leibler_divergence.

Right here, we comply with a latest Google Colaboratory pocket book in batch-estimating the whole ELBO as an alternative (as an alternative of simply estimating reconstruction loss and computing the KL-divergence analytically):

[ELBO batch estimate = log p(x_{batch}|z_{sampled})+log p(z)−log q(z_{sampled}|x_{batch})]

Calculation of the traditional loglikelihood is packaged right into a perform so we are able to reuse it in the course of the coaching loop.

normal_loglik <- perform(pattern, imply, logvar, reduce_axis = 2) {
  loglik <- k_constant(0.5, dtype = tf$float64) *
    (k_log(2 * k_constant(pi, dtype = tf$float64)) +
    logvar +
    k_exp(-logvar) * (pattern - imply) ^ 2)
  - k_sum(loglik, axis = reduce_axis)
}

Peeking forward some, throughout coaching we are going to compute the above as follows.

First,

crossentropy_loss <- tf$nn$sigmoid_cross_entropy_with_logits(
  logits = preds,
  labels = x
)
logpx_z <- - k_sum(crossentropy_loss)

yields (log p(x|z)), the loglikelihood of the reconstructed samples given values sampled from latent area (a.okay.a. reconstruction loss).

Then,

logpz <- normal_loglik(
  z,
  k_constant(0, dtype = tf$float64),
  k_constant(0, dtype = tf$float64)
)

provides (log p(z)), the prior loglikelihood of (z). The prior is assumed to be normal regular, as is most frequently the case with VAEs.

Lastly,

logqz_x <- normal_loglik(z, imply, logvar)

vields (log q(z|x)), the loglikelihood of the samples (z) given imply and variance computed from the noticed samples (x).

From these three elements, we are going to compute the ultimate loss as

loss <- -k_mean(logpx_z + logpz - logqz_x)

After this peaking forward, let’s rapidly end the setup so we prepare for coaching.

Ultimate setup

Moreover the loss, we’d like an optimizer that can try to decrease it.

optimizer <- tf$practice$AdamOptimizer(1e-4)

We instantiate our fashions …

encoder <- encoder_model()
decoder <- decoder_model()

and arrange checkpointing, so we are able to later restore skilled weights.

checkpoint_dir <- "./checkpoints_cvae"
checkpoint_prefix <- file.path(checkpoint_dir, "ckpt")
checkpoint <- tf$practice$Checkpoint(
  optimizer = optimizer,
  encoder = encoder,
  decoder = decoder
)

From the coaching loop, we are going to, in sure intervals, additionally name three features not reproduced right here (however accessible within the code instance): generate_random_clothes, used to generate garments from random samples from the latent area; show_latent_space, that shows the whole take a look at set in latent (2-dimensional, thus simply visualizable) area; and show_grid, that generates garments in line with enter values systematically spaced out in a grid.

Let’s begin coaching! Really, earlier than we try this, let’s take a look at what these features show earlier than any coaching: As a substitute of garments, we see random pixels. Latent area has no construction. And various kinds of garments don’t cluster collectively in latent area.

Coaching loop

We’re coaching for 50 epochs right here. For every epoch, we loop over the coaching set in batches. For every batch, we comply with the same old keen execution circulation: Contained in the context of a GradientTape, apply the mannequin and calculate the present loss; then exterior this context calculate the gradients and let the optimizer carry out backprop.

What’s particular right here is that we now have two fashions that each want their gradients calculated and weights adjusted. This may be taken care of by a single gradient tape, supplied we create it persistent.

After every epoch, we save present weights and each ten epochs, we additionally save plots for later inspection.

num_epochs <- 50

for (epoch in seq_len(num_epochs)) {
  iter <- make_iterator_one_shot(train_dataset)
  
  total_loss <- 0
  logpx_z_total <- 0
  logpz_total <- 0
  logqz_x_total <- 0
  
  until_out_of_range({
    x <-  iterator_get_next(iter)
    
    with(tf$GradientTape(persistent = TRUE) %as% tape, {
      
      c(imply, logvar) %<-% encoder(x)
      z <- reparameterize(imply, logvar)
      preds <- decoder(z)
      
      crossentropy_loss <-
        tf$nn$sigmoid_cross_entropy_with_logits(logits = preds, labels = x)
      logpx_z <-
        - k_sum(crossentropy_loss)
      logpz <-
        normal_loglik(z,
                      k_constant(0, dtype = tf$float64),
                      k_constant(0, dtype = tf$float64)
        )
      logqz_x <- normal_loglik(z, imply, logvar)
      loss <- -k_mean(logpx_z + logpz - logqz_x)
      
    })

    total_loss <- total_loss + loss
    logpx_z_total <- tf$reduce_mean(logpx_z) + logpx_z_total
    logpz_total <- tf$reduce_mean(logpz) + logpz_total
    logqz_x_total <- tf$reduce_mean(logqz_x) + logqz_x_total
    
    encoder_gradients <- tape$gradient(loss, encoder$variables)
    decoder_gradients <- tape$gradient(loss, decoder$variables)
    
    optimizer$apply_gradients(
      purrr::transpose(record(encoder_gradients, encoder$variables)),
      global_step = tf$practice$get_or_create_global_step()
    )
    optimizer$apply_gradients(
      purrr::transpose(record(decoder_gradients, decoder$variables)),
      global_step = tf$practice$get_or_create_global_step()
    )
    
  })
  
  checkpoint$save(file_prefix = checkpoint_prefix)
  
  cat(
    glue(
      "Losses (epoch): {epoch}:",
      "  {(as.numeric(logpx_z_total)/batches_per_epoch) %>% spherical(2)} logpx_z_total,",
      "  {(as.numeric(logpz_total)/batches_per_epoch) %>% spherical(2)} logpz_total,",
      "  {(as.numeric(logqz_x_total)/batches_per_epoch) %>% spherical(2)} logqz_x_total,",
      "  {(as.numeric(total_loss)/batches_per_epoch) %>% spherical(2)} complete"
    ),
    "n"
  )
  
  if (epoch %% 10 == 0) {
    generate_random_clothes(epoch)
    show_latent_space(epoch)
    show_grid(epoch)
  }
}

Outcomes

How properly did that work? Let’s see the varieties of garments generated after 50 epochs.

Additionally, how disentangled (or not) are the completely different courses in latent area?

And now watch completely different garments morph into each other.

How good are these representations? That is exhausting to say when there’s nothing to match with.

So let’s dive into MMD-VAE and see the way it does on the identical dataset.

MMD-VAE

MMD-VAE guarantees to generate extra informative latent options, so we’d hope to see completely different habits particularly within the clustering and morphing plots.

Information setup is similar, and there are solely very slight variations within the mannequin. Please try the whole code for this instance, mmd_vae.R, as right here we’ll simply spotlight the variations.

Variations within the mannequin(s)

There are three variations as regards mannequin structure.

One, the encoder doesn’t should return the variance, so there is no such thing as a want for tf$cut up. The encoder’s name technique now simply is

perform (x, masks = NULL) {
  x %>%
    self$conv1() %>%
    self$conv2() %>%
    self$flatten() %>%
    self$dense() 
}

Between the encoder and the decoder, we don’t want the sampling step anymore, so there is no such thing as a reparameterization.
And since we gained’t use tf$nn$sigmoid_cross_entropy_with_logits to compute the loss, we let the decoder apply the sigmoid within the final deconvolution layer:

self$deconv3 <- layer_conv_2d_transpose(
  filters = 1,
  kernel_size = 3,
  strides = 1,
  padding = "similar",
  activation = "sigmoid"
)

Loss calculations

Now, as anticipated, the large novelty is within the loss perform.

The loss, most imply discrepancy (MMD), relies on the concept two distributions are equivalent if and provided that all moments are equivalent.
Concretely, MMD is estimated utilizing a kernel, such because the Gaussian kernel

[k(z,z’)=frac{e^}{2sigma^2}]

to evaluate similarity between distributions.

The thought then is that if two distributions are equivalent, the common similarity between samples from every distribution needs to be equivalent to the common similarity between blended samples from each distributions:

[MMD(p(z)||q(z))=E_{p(z),p(z’)}[k(z,z’)]+E_{q(z),q(z’)}[k(z,z’)]−2E_{p(z),q(z’)}[k(z,z’)]]
The next code is a direct port of the writer’s unique TensorFlow code:

compute_kernel <- perform(x, y) {
  x_size <- k_shape(x)[1]
  y_size <- k_shape(y)[1]
  dim <- k_shape(x)[2]
  tiled_x <- k_tile(
    k_reshape(x, k_stack(record(x_size, 1, dim))),
    k_stack(record(1, y_size, 1))
  )
  tiled_y <- k_tile(
    k_reshape(y, k_stack(record(1, y_size, dim))),
    k_stack(record(x_size, 1, 1))
  )
  k_exp(-k_mean(k_square(tiled_x - tiled_y), axis = 3) /
          k_cast(dim, tf$float64))
}

compute_mmd <- perform(x, y, sigma_sqr = 1) {
  x_kernel <- compute_kernel(x, x)
  y_kernel <- compute_kernel(y, y)
  xy_kernel <- compute_kernel(x, y)
  k_mean(x_kernel) + k_mean(y_kernel) - 2 * k_mean(xy_kernel)
}

Coaching loop

The coaching loop differs from the usual VAE instance solely within the loss calculations.
Listed below are the respective strains:

 with(tf$GradientTape(persistent = TRUE) %as% tape, {
      
      imply <- encoder(x)
      preds <- decoder(imply)
      
      true_samples <- k_random_normal(
        form = c(batch_size, latent_dim),
        dtype = tf$float64
      )
      loss_mmd <- compute_mmd(true_samples, imply)
      loss_nll <- k_mean(k_square(x - preds))
      loss <- loss_nll + loss_mmd
      
    })

So we merely compute MMD loss in addition to reconstruction loss, and add them up. No sampling is concerned on this model.
In fact, we’re curious to see how properly that labored!

Outcomes

Once more, let’s take a look at some generated garments first. It looks like edges are a lot sharper right here.

The clusters too look extra properly unfold out within the two dimensions. And, they’re centered at (0,0), as we’d have hoped for.

Lastly, let’s see garments morph into each other. Right here, the graceful, steady evolutions are spectacular!
Additionally, practically all area is crammed with significant objects, which hasn’t been the case above.

MNIST

For curiosity’s sake, we generated the identical sorts of plots after coaching on unique MNIST.
Right here, there are hardly any variations seen in generated random digits after 50 epochs of coaching.

Left: random digits as generated after training with ELBO loss. Right: MMD loss.

Additionally the variations in clustering are usually not that huge.

Left: latent space as observed after training with ELBO loss. Right: MMD loss.

However right here too, the morphing appears rather more natural with MMD-VAE.

Left: Morphing as observed after training with ELBO loss. Right: MMD loss.

Conclusion

To us, this demonstrates impressively what huge a distinction the price perform could make when working with VAEs.
One other element open to experimentation often is the prior used for the latent area – see this discuss for an summary of different priors and the “Variational Combination of Posteriors” paper (Tomczak and Welling 2017) for a preferred latest strategy.

For each value features and priors, we anticipate efficient variations to turn out to be approach greater nonetheless after we go away the managed atmosphere of (Vogue) MNIST and work with real-world datasets.

Burgess, C. P., I. Higgins, A. Pal, L. Matthey, N. Watters, G. Desjardins, and A. Lerchner. 2018. “Understanding Disentangling in Beta-VAE.” ArXiv e-Prints, April. https://arxiv.org/abs/1804.03599.
Doersch, C. 2016. “Tutorial on Variational Autoencoders.” ArXiv e-Prints, June. https://arxiv.org/abs/1606.05908.

Kingma, Diederik P., and Max Welling. 2013. “Auto-Encoding Variational Bayes.” CoRR abs/1312.6114.

Tomczak, Jakub M., and Max Welling. 2017. “VAE with a VampPrior.” CoRR abs/1705.07120.

Zhao, Shengjia, Jiaming Music, and Stefano Ermon. 2017. “InfoVAE: Info Maximizing Variational Autoencoders.” CoRR abs/1706.02262. http://arxiv.org/abs/1706.02262.

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