2.3. Clustering¶
Clustering of
unlabeled data can be performed with the module sklearn.cluster
.
Each clustering algorithm comes in two variants: a class, that implements
the fit
method to learn the clusters on train data, and a function,
that, given train data, returns an array of integer labels corresponding
to the different clusters. For the class, the labels over the training
data can be found in the labels_
attribute.
Input data
One important thing to note is that the algorithms implemented in
this module take different kinds of matrix as input. On one hand,
MeanShift
and KMeans
take data matrices of shape
[n_samples, n_features]. These can be obtained from the classes in
the sklearn.feature_extraction
module. On the other hand,
AffinityPropagation
and SpectralClustering
take
similarity matrices of shape [n_samples, n_samples]. These can be
obtained from the functions in the sklearn.metrics.pairwise
module. In other words, MeanShift
and KMeans
work
with points in a vector space, whereas AffinityPropagation
and SpectralClustering
can work with arbitrary objects, as
long as a similarity measure exists for such objects.
2.3.1. Overview of clustering methods¶
Method name | Parameters | Scalability | Usecase | Geometry (metric used) |
---|---|---|---|---|
K-Means | number of clusters | Very large n_samples , medium n_clusters with
MiniBatch code |
General-purpose, even cluster size, flat geometry, not too many clusters | Distances between points |
Affinity propagation | damping, sample preference | Not scalable with n_samples | Many clusters, uneven cluster size, non-flat geometry | Graph distance (e.g. nearest-neighbor graph) |
Mean-shift | bandwidth | Not scalable with n_samples |
Many clusters, uneven cluster size, non-flat geometry | Distances between points |
Spectral clustering | number of clusters | Medium n_samples , small n_clusters |
Few clusters, even cluster size, non-flat geometry | Graph distance (e.g. nearest-neighbor graph) |
Ward hierarchical clustering | number of clusters | Large n_samples and n_clusters |
Many clusters, possibly connectivity constraints | Distances between points |
Agglomerative clustering | number of clusters, linkage type, distance | Large n_samples and n_clusters |
Many clusters, possibly connectivity constraints, non Euclidean distances | Any pairwise distance |
DBSCAN | neighborhood size | Very large n_samples , medium n_clusters |
Non-flat geometry, uneven cluster sizes | Distances between nearest points |
Gaussian mixtures | many | Not scalable | Flat geometry, good for density estimation | Mahalanobis distances to centers |
Birch | branching factor, threshold, optional global clusterer. | Large n_clusters and n_samples |
Large dataset, outlier removal, data reduction. | Euclidean distance between points |
Non-flat geometry clustering is useful when the clusters have a specific shape, i.e. a non-flat manifold, and the standard euclidean distance is not the right metric. This case arises in the two top rows of the figure above.
Gaussian mixture models, useful for clustering, are described in another chapter of the documentation dedicated to mixture models. KMeans can be seen as a special case of Gaussian mixture model with equal covariance per component.
2.3.2. K-means¶
The KMeans
algorithm clusters data by trying to separate samples
in n groups of equal variance, minimizing a criterion known as the
inertia or within-cluster sum-of-squares.
This algorithm requires the number of clusters to be specified.
It scales well to large number of samples and has been used
across a large range of application areas in many different fields.
The k-means algorithm divides a set of samples into disjoint clusters , each described by the mean of the samples in the cluster. The means are commonly called the cluster “centroids”; note that they are not, in general, points from , although they live in the same space. The K-means algorithm aims to choose centroids that minimise the inertia, or within-cluster sum of squared criterion:
Inertia, or the within-cluster sum of squares criterion, can be recognized as a measure of how internally coherent clusters are. It suffers from various drawbacks:
- Inertia makes the assumption that clusters are convex and isotropic, which is not always the case. It responds poorly to elongated clusters, or manifolds with irregular shapes.
- Inertia is not a normalized metric: we just know that lower values are better and zero is optimal. But in very high-dimensional spaces, Euclidean distances tend to become inflated (this is an instance of the so-called “curse of dimensionality”). Running a dimensionality reduction algorithm such as PCA prior to k-means clustering can alleviate this problem and speed up the computations.
K-means is often referred to as Lloyd’s algorithm. In basic terms, the algorithm has three steps. The first step chooses the initial centroids, with the most basic method being to choose samples from the dataset . After initialization, K-means consists of looping between the two other steps. The first step assigns each sample to its nearest centroid. The second step creates new centroids by taking the mean value of all of the samples assigned to each previous centroid. The difference between the old and the new centroids are computed and the algorithm repeats these last two steps until this value is less than a threshold. In other words, it repeats until the centroids do not move significantly.
K-means is equivalent to the expectation-maximization algorithm with a small, all-equal, diagonal covariance matrix.
The algorithm can also be understood through the concept of Voronoi diagrams. First the Voronoi diagram of the points is calculated using the current centroids. Each segment in the Voronoi diagram becomes a separate cluster. Secondly, the centroids are updated to the mean of each segment. The algorithm then repeats this until a stopping criterion is fulfilled. Usually, the algorithm stops when the relative decrease in the objective function between iterations is less than the given tolerance value. This is not the case in this implementation: iteration stops when centroids move less than the tolerance.
Given enough time, K-means will always converge, however this may be to a local
minimum. This is highly dependent on the initialization of the centroids.
As a result, the computation is often done several times, with different
initializations of the centroids. One method to help address this issue is the
k-means++ initialization scheme, which has been implemented in scikit-learn
(use the init='kmeans++'
parameter). This initializes the centroids to be
(generally) distant from each other, leading to provably better results than
random initialization, as shown in the reference.
A parameter can be given to allow K-means to be run in parallel, called
n_jobs
. Giving this parameter a positive value uses that many processors
(default: 1). A value of -1 uses all available processors, with -2 using one
less, and so on. Parallelization generally speeds up computation at the cost of
memory (in this case, multiple copies of centroids need to be stored, one for
each job).
警告
The parallel version of K-Means is broken on OS X when numpy uses the Accelerate Framework. This is expected behavior: Accelerate can be called after a fork but you need to execv the subprocess with the Python binary (which multiprocessing does not do under posix).
K-means can be used for vector quantization. This is achieved using the
transform method of a trained model of KMeans
.
Examples:
- Demonstration of k-means assumptions: Demonstrating when k-means performs intuitively and when it does not
- A demo of K-Means clustering on the handwritten digits data: Clustering handwritten digits
References:
- “k-means++: The advantages of careful seeding” Arthur, David, and Sergei Vassilvitskii, Proceedings of the eighteenth annual ACM-SIAM symposium on Discrete algorithms, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (2007)
2.3.2.1. Mini Batch K-Means¶
The MiniBatchKMeans
is a variant of the KMeans
algorithm
which uses mini-batches to reduce the computation time, while still attempting
to optimise the same objective function. Mini-batches are subsets of the input
data, randomly sampled in each training iteration. These mini-batches
drastically reduce the amount of computation required to converge to a local
solution. In contrast to other algorithms that reduce the convergence time of
k-means, mini-batch k-means produces results that are generally only slightly
worse than the standard algorithm.
The algorithm iterates between two major steps, similar to vanilla k-means. In the first step, samples are drawn randomly from the dataset, to form a mini-batch. These are then assigned to the nearest centroid. In the second step, the centroids are updated. In contrast to k-means, this is done on a per-sample basis. For each sample in the mini-batch, the assigned centroid is updated by taking the streaming average of the sample and all previous samples assigned to that centroid. This has the effect of decreasing the rate of change for a centroid over time. These steps are performed until convergence or a predetermined number of iterations is reached.
MiniBatchKMeans
converges faster than KMeans
, but the quality
of the results is reduced. In practice this difference in quality can be quite
small, as shown in the example and cited reference.
Examples:
- Comparison of the K-Means and MiniBatchKMeans clustering algorithms: Comparison of KMeans and MiniBatchKMeans
- Clustering text documents using k-means: Document clustering using sparse MiniBatchKMeans
- Online learning of a dictionary of parts of faces
References:
- “Web Scale K-Means clustering” D. Sculley, Proceedings of the 19th international conference on World wide web (2010)
2.3.3. Affinity Propagation¶
AffinityPropagation
creates clusters by sending messages between
pairs of samples until convergence. A dataset is then described using a small
number of exemplars, which are identified as those most representative of other
samples. The messages sent between pairs represent the suitability for one
sample to be the exemplar of the other, which is updated in response to the
values from other pairs. This updating happens iteratively until convergence,
at which point the final exemplars are chosen, and hence the final clustering
is given.
Affinity Propagation can be interesting as it chooses the number of clusters based on the data provided. For this purpose, the two important parameters are the preference, which controls how many exemplars are used, and the damping factor.
The main drawback of Affinity Propagation is its complexity. The algorithm has a time complexity of the order , where is the number of samples and is the number of iterations until convergence. Further, the memory complexity is of the order if a dense similarity matrix is used, but reducible if a sparse similarity matrix is used. This makes Affinity Propagation most appropriate for small to medium sized datasets.
Examples:
- Demo of affinity propagation clustering algorithm: Affinity Propagation on a synthetic 2D datasets with 3 classes.
- Visualizing the stock market structure Affinity Propagation on Financial time series to find groups of companies
Algorithm description: The messages sent between points belong to one of two categories. The first is the responsibility , which is the accumulated evidence that sample should be the exemplar for sample . The second is the availability which is the accumulated evidence that sample should choose sample to be its exemplar, and considers the values for all other samples that should be an exemplar. In this way, exemplars are chosen by samples if they are (1) similar enough to many samples and (2) chosen by many samples to be representative of themselves.
More formally, the responsibility of a sample to be the exemplar of sample is given by:
Where is the similarity between samples and . The availability of sample to be the exemplar of sample is given by:
To begin with, all values for and are set to zero, and the calculation of each iterates until convergence.
2.3.4. Mean Shift¶
MeanShift
clustering aims to discover blobs in a smooth density of
samples. It is a centroid based algorithm, which works by updating candidates
for centroids to be the mean of the points within a given region. These
candidates are then filtered in a post-processing stage to eliminate
near-duplicates to form the final set of centroids.
Given a candidate centroid for iteration , the candidate is updated according to the following equation:
Where is the neighborhood of samples within a given distance around and is the mean shift vector that is computed for each centroid that points towards a region of the maximum increase in the density of points. This is computed using the following equation, effectively updating a centroid to be the mean of the samples within its neighborhood:
The algorithm automatically sets the number of clusters, instead of relying on a
parameter bandwidth
, which dictates the size of the region to search through.
This parameter can be set manually, but can be estimated using the provided
estimate_bandwidth
function, which is called if the bandwidth is not set.
The algorithm is not highly scalable, as it requires multiple nearest neighbor searches during the execution of the algorithm. The algorithm is guaranteed to converge, however the algorithm will stop iterating when the change in centroids is small.
Labelling a new sample is performed by finding the nearest centroid for a given sample.
Examples:
- A demo of the mean-shift clustering algorithm: Mean Shift clustering on a synthetic 2D datasets with 3 classes.
References:
- “Mean shift: A robust approach toward feature space analysis.” D. Comaniciu and P. Meer, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence (2002)
2.3.5. Spectral clustering¶
SpectralClustering
does a low-dimension embedding of the
affinity matrix between samples, followed by a KMeans in the low
dimensional space. It is especially efficient if the affinity matrix is
sparse and the pyamg module is installed.
SpectralClustering requires the number of clusters to be specified. It
works well for a small number of clusters but is not advised when using
many clusters.
For two clusters, it solves a convex relaxation of the normalised cuts problem on the similarity graph: cutting the graph in two so that the weight of the edges cut is small compared to the weights of the edges inside each cluster. This criteria is especially interesting when working on images: graph vertices are pixels, and edges of the similarity graph are a function of the gradient of the image.
警告
Transforming distance to well-behaved similarities
Note that if the values of your similarity matrix are not well distributed, e.g. with negative values or with a distance matrix rather than a similarity, the spectral problem will be singular and the problem not solvable. In which case it is advised to apply a transformation to the entries of the matrix. For instance, in the case of a signed distance matrix, is common to apply a heat kernel:
similarity = np.exp(-beta * distance / distance.std())
See the examples for such an application.
Examples:
- Spectral clustering for image segmentation: Segmenting objects from a noisy background using spectral clustering.
- Segmenting the picture of a raccoon face in regions: Spectral clustering to split the image of the raccoon face in regions.
2.3.5.1. Different label assignment strategies¶
Different label assignment strategies can be used, corresponding to the
assign_labels
parameter of SpectralClustering
.
The "kmeans"
strategy can match finer details of the data, but it can be
more unstable. In particular, unless you control the random_state
, it
may not be reproducible from run-to-run, as it depends on a random
initialization. On the other hand, the "discretize"
strategy is 100%
reproducible, but it tends to create parcels of fairly even and
geometrical shape.
assign_labels="kmeans" |
assign_labels="discretize" |
---|---|
References:
- “A Tutorial on Spectral Clustering” Ulrike von Luxburg, 2007
- “Normalized cuts and image segmentation” Jianbo Shi, Jitendra Malik, 2000
- “A Random Walks View of Spectral Segmentation” Marina Meila, Jianbo Shi, 2001
- “On Spectral Clustering: Analysis and an algorithm” Andrew Y. Ng, Michael I. Jordan, Yair Weiss, 2001
2.3.6. Hierarchical clustering¶
Hierarchical clustering is a general family of clustering algorithms that build nested clusters by merging or splitting them successively. This hierarchy of clusters is represented as a tree (or dendrogram). The root of the tree is the unique cluster that gathers all the samples, the leaves being the clusters with only one sample. See the Wikipedia page for more details.
The AgglomerativeClustering
object performs a hierarchical clustering
using a bottom up approach: each observation starts in its own cluster, and
clusters are successively merged together. The linkage criteria determines the
metric used for the merge strategy:
- Ward minimizes the sum of squared differences within all clusters. It is a variance-minimizing approach and in this sense is similar to the k-means objective function but tackled with an agglomerative hierarchical approach.
- Maximum or complete linkage minimizes the maximum distance between observations of pairs of clusters.
- Average linkage minimizes the average of the distances between all observations of pairs of clusters.
AgglomerativeClustering
can also scale to large number of samples
when it is used jointly with a connectivity matrix, but is computationally
expensive when no connectivity constraints are added between samples: it
considers at each step all the possible merges.
The FeatureAgglomeration
uses agglomerative clustering to
group together features that look very similar, thus decreasing the
number of features. It is a dimensionality reduction tool, see
Unsupervised dimensionality reduction.
2.3.6.1. Different linkage type: Ward, complete and average linkage¶
AgglomerativeClustering
supports Ward, average, and complete
linkage strategies.
Agglomerative cluster has a “rich get richer” behavior that leads to uneven cluster sizes. In this regard, complete linkage is the worst strategy, and Ward gives the most regular sizes. However, the affinity (or distance used in clustering) cannot be varied with Ward, thus for non Euclidean metrics, average linkage is a good alternative.
Examples:
- Various Agglomerative Clustering on a 2D embedding of digits: exploration of the different linkage strategies in a real dataset.
2.3.6.2. Adding connectivity constraints¶
An interesting aspect of AgglomerativeClustering
is that
connectivity constraints can be added to this algorithm (only adjacent
clusters can be merged together), through a connectivity matrix that defines
for each sample the neighboring samples following a given structure of the
data. For instance, in the swiss-roll example below, the connectivity
constraints forbid the merging of points that are not adjacent on the swiss
roll, and thus avoid forming clusters that extend across overlapping folds of
the roll.
These constraint are useful to impose a certain local structure, but they also make the algorithm faster, especially when the number of the samples is high.
The connectivity constraints are imposed via an connectivity matrix: a
scipy sparse matrix that has elements only at the intersection of a row
and a column with indices of the dataset that should be connected. This
matrix can be constructed from a-priori information: for instance, you
may wish to cluster web pages by only merging pages with a link pointing
from one to another. It can also be learned from the data, for instance
using sklearn.neighbors.kneighbors_graph
to restrict
merging to nearest neighbors as in this example, or
using sklearn.feature_extraction.image.grid_to_graph
to
enable only merging of neighboring pixels on an image, as in the
raccoon face example.
Examples:
- A demo of structured Ward hierarchical clustering on a raccoon face image: Ward clustering to split the image of a raccoon face in regions.
- Hierarchical clustering: structured vs unstructured ward: Example of Ward algorithm on a swiss-roll, comparison of structured approaches versus unstructured approaches.
- Feature agglomeration vs. univariate selection: Example of dimensionality reduction with feature agglomeration based on Ward hierarchical clustering.
- Agglomerative clustering with and without structure
警告
Connectivity constraints with average and complete linkage
Connectivity constraints and complete or average linkage can enhance
the ‘rich getting richer’ aspect of agglomerative clustering,
particularly so if they are built with
sklearn.neighbors.kneighbors_graph
. In the limit of a small
number of clusters, they tend to give a few macroscopically occupied
clusters and almost empty ones. (see the discussion in
Agglomerative clustering with and without structure).
2.3.6.3. Varying the metric¶
Average and complete linkage can be used with a variety of distances (or affinities), in particular Euclidean distance (l2), Manhattan distance (or Cityblock, or l1), cosine distance, or any precomputed affinity matrix.
- l1 distance is often good for sparse features, or sparse noise: ie many of the features are zero, as in text mining using occurences of rare words.
- cosine distance is interesting because it is invariant to global scalings of the signal.
The guidelines for choosing a metric is to use one that maximizes the distance between samples in different classes, and minimizes that within each class.
2.3.7. DBSCAN¶
The DBSCAN
algorithm views clusters as areas of high density
separated by areas of low density. Due to this rather generic view, clusters
found by DBSCAN can be any shape, as opposed to k-means which assumes that
clusters are convex shaped. The central component to the DBSCAN is the concept
of core samples, which are samples that are in areas of high density. A
cluster is therefore a set of core samples, each close to each other
(measured by some distance measure)
and a set of non-core samples that are close to a core sample (but are not
themselves core samples). There are two parameters to the algorithm,
min_samples
and eps
,
which define formally what we mean when we say dense.
Higher min_samples
or lower eps
indicate higher density necessary to form a cluster.
More formally, we define a core sample as being a sample in the dataset such
that there exist min_samples
other samples within a distance of
eps
, which are defined as neighbors of the core sample. This tells
us that the core sample is in a dense area of the vector space. A cluster
is a set of core samples, that can be built by recursively by taking a core
sample, finding all of its neighbors that are core samples, finding all of
their neighbors that are core samples, and so on. A cluster also has a
set of non-core samples, which are samples that are neighbors of a core sample
in the cluster but are not themselves core samples. Intuitively, these samples
are on the fringes of a cluster.
Any core sample is part of a cluster, by definition. Further, any cluster has
at least min_samples
points in it, following the definition of a core
sample. For any sample that is not a core sample, and does have a
distance higher than eps
to any core sample, it is considered an outlier by
the algorithm.
In the figure below, the color indicates cluster membership, with large circles indicating core samples found by the algorithm. Smaller circles are non-core samples that are still part of a cluster. Moreover, the outliers are indicated by black points below.
Examples:
Implementation
The algorithm is non-deterministic, but the core samples will
always belong to the same clusters (although the labels may be
different). The non-determinism comes from deciding to which cluster a
non-core sample belongs. A non-core sample can have a distance lower
than eps
to two core samples in different clusters. By the
triangular inequality, those two core samples must be more distant than
eps
from each other, or they would be in the same cluster. The non-core
sample is assigned to whichever cluster is generated first, where
the order is determined randomly. Other than the ordering of
the dataset, the algorithm is deterministic, making the results relatively
stable between runs on the same data.
The current implementation uses ball trees and kd-trees
to determine the neighborhood of points,
which avoids calculating the full distance matrix
(as was done in scikit-learn versions before 0.14).
The possibility to use custom metrics is retained;
for details, see NearestNeighbors
.
References:
- “A Density-Based Algorithm for Discovering Clusters in Large Spatial Databases with Noise” Ester, M., H. P. Kriegel, J. Sander, and X. Xu, In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, Portland, OR, AAAI Press, pp. 226–231. 1996
2.3.8. Birch¶
The Birch
builds a tree called the Characteristic Feature Tree (CFT)
for the given data. The data is essentially lossy compressed to a set of
Characteristic Feature nodes (CF Nodes). The CF Nodes have a number of
subclusters called Characteristic Feature subclusters (CF Subclusters)
and these CF Subclusters located in the non-terminal CF Nodes
can have CF Nodes as children.
The CF Subclusters hold the necessary information for clustering which prevents the need to hold the entire input data in memory. This information includes:
- Number of samples in a subcluster.
- Linear Sum - A n-dimensional vector holding the sum of all samples
- Squared Sum - Sum of the squared L2 norm of all samples.
- Centroids - To avoid recalculation linear sum / n_samples.
- Squared norm of the centroids.
The Birch algorithm has two parameters, the threshold and the branching factor. The branching factor limits the number of subclusters in a node and the threshold limits the distance between the entering sample and the existing subclusters.
This algorithm can be viewed as an instance or data reduction method,
since it reduces the input data to a set of subclusters which are obtained directly
from the leaves of the CFT. This reduced data can be further processed by feeding
it into a global clusterer. This global clusterer can be set by n_clusters
.
If n_clusters
is set to None, the subclusters from the leaves are directly
read off, otherwise a global clustering step labels these subclusters into global
clusters (labels) and the samples are mapped to the global label of the nearest subcluster.
Algorithm description:
- A new sample is inserted into the root of the CF Tree which is a CF Node. It is then merged with the subcluster of the root, that has the smallest radius after merging, constrained by the threshold and branching factor conditions. If the subcluster has any child node, then this is done repeatedly till it reaches a leaf. After finding the nearest subcluster in the leaf, the properties of this subcluster and the parent subclusters are recursively updated.
- If the radius of the subcluster obtained by merging the new sample and the nearest subcluster is greater than the square of the threshold and if the number of subclusters is greater than the branching factor, then a space is temporarily allocated to this new sample. The two farthest subclusters are taken and the subclusters are divided into two groups on the basis of the distance between these subclusters.
- If this split node has a parent subcluster and there is room for a new subcluster, then the parent is split into two. If there is no room, then this node is again split into two and the process is continued recursively, till it reaches the root.
Birch or MiniBatchKMeans?
- Birch does not scale very well to high dimensional data. As a rule of thumb if
n_features
is greater than twenty, it is generally better to use MiniBatchKMeans.- If the number of instances of data needs to be reduced, or if one wants a large number of subclusters either as a preprocessing step or otherwise, Birch is more useful than MiniBatchKMeans.
How to use partial_fit?
To avoid the computation of global clustering, for every call of partial_fit
the user is advised
- To set
n_clusters=None
initially- Train all data by multiple calls to partial_fit.
- Set
n_clusters
to a required value usingbrc.set_params(n_clusters=n_clusters)
.- Call
partial_fit
finally with no arguments, i.ebrc.partial_fit()
which performs the global clustering.
References:
- Tian Zhang, Raghu Ramakrishnan, Maron Livny BIRCH: An efficient data clustering method for large databases. http://www.cs.sfu.ca/CourseCentral/459/han/papers/zhang96.pdf
- Roberto Perdisci JBirch - Java implementation of BIRCH clustering algorithm https://code.google.com/p/jbirch/
2.3.9. Clustering performance evaluation¶
Evaluating the performance of a clustering algorithm is not as trivial as counting the number of errors or the precision and recall of a supervised classification algorithm. In particular any evaluation metric should not take the absolute values of the cluster labels into account but rather if this clustering define separations of the data similar to some ground truth set of classes or satisfying some assumption such that members belong to the same class are more similar that members of different classes according to some similarity metric.
2.3.9.1. Adjusted Rand index¶
Given the knowledge of the ground truth class assignments labels_true
and our clustering algorithm assignments of the same samples
labels_pred
, the adjusted Rand index is a function that measures
the similarity of the two assignments, ignoring permutations and with
chance normalization:
>>> from sklearn import metrics
>>> labels_true = [0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]
>>> labels_pred = [0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.adjusted_rand_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.24...
One can permute 0 and 1 in the predicted labels, rename 2 to 3, and get the same score:
>>> labels_pred = [1, 1, 0, 0, 3, 3]
>>> metrics.adjusted_rand_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.24...
Furthermore, adjusted_rand_score
is symmetric: swapping the argument
does not change the score. It can thus be used as a consensus
measure:
>>> metrics.adjusted_rand_score(labels_pred, labels_true)
0.24...
Perfect labeling is scored 1.0:
>>> labels_pred = labels_true[:]
>>> metrics.adjusted_rand_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
1.0
Bad (e.g. independent labelings) have negative or close to 0.0 scores:
>>> labels_true = [0, 1, 2, 0, 3, 4, 5, 1]
>>> labels_pred = [1, 1, 0, 0, 2, 2, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.adjusted_rand_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
-0.12...
2.3.9.1.1. Advantages¶
- Random (uniform) label assignments have a ARI score close to 0.0
for any value of
n_clusters
andn_samples
(which is not the case for raw Rand index or the V-measure for instance). - Bounded range [-1, 1]: negative values are bad (independent labelings), similar clusterings have a positive ARI, 1.0 is the perfect match score.
- No assumption is made on the cluster structure: can be used to compare clustering algorithms such as k-means which assumes isotropic blob shapes with results of spectral clustering algorithms which can find cluster with “folded” shapes.
2.3.9.1.2. Drawbacks¶
Contrary to inertia, ARI requires knowledge of the ground truth classes while is almost never available in practice or requires manual assignment by human annotators (as in the supervised learning setting).
However ARI can also be useful in a purely unsupervised setting as a building block for a Consensus Index that can be used for clustering model selection (TODO).
Examples:
- Adjustment for chance in clustering performance evaluation: Analysis of the impact of the dataset size on the value of clustering measures for random assignments.
2.3.9.1.3. Mathematical formulation¶
If C is a ground truth class assignment and K the clustering, let us define and as:
- , the number of pairs of elements that are in the same set in C and in the same set in K
- , the number of pairs of elements that are in different sets in C and in different sets in K
The raw (unadjusted) Rand index is then given by:
Where is the total number of possible pairs in the dataset (without ordering).
However the RI score does not guarantee that random label assignments will get a value close to zero (esp. if the number of clusters is in the same order of magnitude as the number of samples).
To counter this effect we can discount the expected RI of random labelings by defining the adjusted Rand index as follows:
References
- Comparing Partitions L. Hubert and P. Arabie, Journal of Classification 1985
- Wikipedia entry for the adjusted Rand index
2.3.9.2. Mutual Information based scores¶
Given the knowledge of the ground truth class assignments labels_true
and
our clustering algorithm assignments of the same samples labels_pred
, the
Mutual Information is a function that measures the agreement of the two
assignments, ignoring permutations. Two different normalized versions of this
measure are available, Normalized Mutual Information(NMI) and Adjusted
Mutual Information(AMI). NMI is often used in the literature while AMI was
proposed more recently and is normalized against chance:
>>> from sklearn import metrics
>>> labels_true = [0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]
>>> labels_pred = [0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.adjusted_mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.22504...
One can permute 0 and 1 in the predicted labels, rename 2 to 3 and get the same score:
>>> labels_pred = [1, 1, 0, 0, 3, 3]
>>> metrics.adjusted_mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.22504...
All, mutual_info_score
, adjusted_mutual_info_score
and
normalized_mutual_info_score
are symmetric: swapping the argument does
not change the score. Thus they can be used as a consensus measure:
>>> metrics.adjusted_mutual_info_score(labels_pred, labels_true)
0.22504...
Perfect labeling is scored 1.0:
>>> labels_pred = labels_true[:]
>>> metrics.adjusted_mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
1.0
>>> metrics.normalized_mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
1.0
This is not true for mutual_info_score
, which is therefore harder to judge:
>>> metrics.mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.69...
Bad (e.g. independent labelings) have non-positive scores:
>>> labels_true = [0, 1, 2, 0, 3, 4, 5, 1]
>>> labels_pred = [1, 1, 0, 0, 2, 2, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.adjusted_mutual_info_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
-0.10526...
2.3.9.2.1. Advantages¶
- Random (uniform) label assignments have a AMI score close to 0.0
for any value of
n_clusters
andn_samples
(which is not the case for raw Mutual Information or the V-measure for instance). - Bounded range [0, 1]: Values close to zero indicate two label assignments that are largely independent, while values close to one indicate significant agreement. Further, values of exactly 0 indicate purely independent label assignments and a AMI of exactly 1 indicates that the two label assignments are equal (with or without permutation).
- No assumption is made on the cluster structure: can be used to compare clustering algorithms such as k-means which assumes isotropic blob shapes with results of spectral clustering algorithms which can find cluster with “folded” shapes.
2.3.9.2.2. Drawbacks¶
Contrary to inertia, MI-based measures require the knowledge of the ground truth classes while almost never available in practice or requires manual assignment by human annotators (as in the supervised learning setting).
However MI-based measures can also be useful in purely unsupervised setting as a building block for a Consensus Index that can be used for clustering model selection.
NMI and MI are not adjusted against chance.
Examples:
- Adjustment for chance in clustering performance evaluation: Analysis of the impact of the dataset size on the value of clustering measures for random assignments. This example also includes the Adjusted Rand Index.
2.3.9.2.3. Mathematical formulation¶
Assume two label assignments (of the same N objects), and . Their entropy is the amount of uncertainty for a partition set, defined by:
where is the probability that an object picked at random from falls into class . Likewise for :
With . The mutual information (MI) between and is calculated by:
where is the probability that an object picked at random falls into both classes and .
The normalized mutual information is defined as
This value of the mutual information and also the normalized variant is not adjusted for chance and will tend to increase as the number of different labels (clusters) increases, regardless of the actual amount of “mutual information” between the label assignments.
The expected value for the mutual information can be calculated using the following equation, from Vinh, Epps, and Bailey, (2009). In this equation, (the number of elements in ) and (the number of elements in ).
Using the expected value, the adjusted mutual information can then be calculated using a similar form to that of the adjusted Rand index:
References
- Strehl, Alexander, and Joydeep Ghosh (2002). “Cluster ensembles – a knowledge reuse framework for combining multiple partitions”. Journal of Machine Learning Research 3: 583–617. doi:10.1162/153244303321897735.
- Vinh, Epps, and Bailey, (2009). “Information theoretic measures for clusterings comparison”. Proceedings of the 26th Annual International Conference on Machine Learning - ICML ‘09. doi:10.1145/1553374.1553511. ISBN 9781605585161.
- Vinh, Epps, and Bailey, (2010). Information Theoretic Measures for Clusterings Comparison: Variants, Properties, Normalization and Correction for Chance, JMLR http://jmlr.csail.mit.edu/papers/volume11/vinh10a/vinh10a.pdf
- Wikipedia entry for the (normalized) Mutual Information
- Wikipedia entry for the Adjusted Mutual Information
2.3.9.3. Homogeneity, completeness and V-measure¶
Given the knowledge of the ground truth class assignments of the samples, it is possible to define some intuitive metric using conditional entropy analysis.
In particular Rosenberg and Hirschberg (2007) define the following two desirable objectives for any cluster assignment:
- homogeneity: each cluster contains only members of a single class.
- completeness: all members of a given class are assigned to the same cluster.
We can turn those concept as scores homogeneity_score
and
completeness_score
. Both are bounded below by 0.0 and above by
1.0 (higher is better):
>>> from sklearn import metrics
>>> labels_true = [0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]
>>> labels_pred = [0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.homogeneity_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.66...
>>> metrics.completeness_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.42...
Their harmonic mean called V-measure is computed by
v_measure_score
:
>>> metrics.v_measure_score(labels_true, labels_pred)
0.51...
The V-measure is actually equivalent to the mutual information (NMI) discussed above normalized by the sum of the label entropies [B2011].
Homogeneity, completeness and V-measure can be computed at once using
homogeneity_completeness_v_measure
as follows:
>>> metrics.homogeneity_completeness_v_measure(labels_true, labels_pred)
...
(0.66..., 0.42..., 0.51...)
The following clustering assignment is slightly better, since it is homogeneous but not complete:
>>> labels_pred = [0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 2]
>>> metrics.homogeneity_completeness_v_measure(labels_true, labels_pred)
...
(1.0, 0.68..., 0.81...)
注解
v_measure_score
is symmetric: it can be used to evaluate
the agreement of two independent assignments on the same dataset.
This is not the case for completeness_score
and
homogeneity_score
: both are bound by the relationship:
homogeneity_score(a, b) == completeness_score(b, a)
2.3.9.3.1. Advantages¶
- Bounded scores: 0.0 is as bad as it can be, 1.0 is a perfect score.
- Intuitive interpretation: clustering with bad V-measure can be qualitatively analyzed in terms of homogeneity and completeness to better feel what ‘kind’ of mistakes is done by the assignment.
- No assumption is made on the cluster structure: can be used to compare clustering algorithms such as k-means which assumes isotropic blob shapes with results of spectral clustering algorithms which can find cluster with “folded” shapes.
2.3.9.3.2. Drawbacks¶
The previously introduced metrics are not normalized with regards to random labeling: this means that depending on the number of samples, clusters and ground truth classes, a completely random labeling will not always yield the same values for homogeneity, completeness and hence v-measure. In particular random labeling won’t yield zero scores especially when the number of clusters is large.
This problem can safely be ignored when the number of samples is more than a thousand and the number of clusters is less than 10. For smaller sample sizes or larger number of clusters it is safer to use an adjusted index such as the Adjusted Rand Index (ARI).
- These metrics require the knowledge of the ground truth classes while almost never available in practice or requires manual assignment by human annotators (as in the supervised learning setting).
Examples:
- Adjustment for chance in clustering performance evaluation: Analysis of the impact of the dataset size on the value of clustering measures for random assignments.
2.3.9.3.3. Mathematical formulation¶
Homogeneity and completeness scores are formally given by:
where is the conditional entropy of the classes given the cluster assignments and is given by:
and is the entropy of the classes and is given by:
with the total number of samples, and the number of samples respectively belonging to class and cluster , and finally the number of samples from class assigned to cluster .
The conditional entropy of clusters given class and the entropy of clusters are defined in a symmetric manner.
Rosenberg and Hirschberg further define V-measure as the harmonic mean of homogeneity and completeness:
References
[RH2007] | V-Measure: A conditional entropy-based external cluster evaluation measure Andrew Rosenberg and Julia Hirschberg, 2007 |
[B2011] | Identication and Characterization of Events in Social Media, Hila Becker, PhD Thesis. |
2.3.9.4. Silhouette Coefficient¶
If the ground truth labels are not known, evaluation must be performed using
the model itself. The Silhouette Coefficient
(sklearn.metrics.silhouette_score
)
is an example of such an evaluation, where a
higher Silhouette Coefficient score relates to a model with better defined
clusters. The Silhouette Coefficient is defined for each sample and is composed
of two scores:
- a: The mean distance between a sample and all other points in the same class.
- b: The mean distance between a sample and all other points in the next nearest cluster.
The Silhouette Coefficient s for a single sample is then given as:
The Silhouette Coefficient for a set of samples is given as the mean of the Silhouette Coefficient for each sample.
>>> from sklearn import metrics
>>> from sklearn.metrics import pairwise_distances
>>> from sklearn import datasets
>>> dataset = datasets.load_iris()
>>> X = dataset.data
>>> y = dataset.target
In normal usage, the Silhouette Coefficient is applied to the results of a cluster analysis.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from sklearn.cluster import KMeans
>>> kmeans_model = KMeans(n_clusters=3, random_state=1).fit(X)
>>> labels = kmeans_model.labels_
>>> metrics.silhouette_score(X, labels, metric='euclidean')
...
0.55...
References
- Peter J. Rousseeuw (1987). “Silhouettes: a Graphical Aid to the Interpretation and Validation of Cluster Analysis”. Computational and Applied Mathematics 20: 53–65. doi:10.1016/0377-0427(87)90125-7.
2.3.9.4.1. Advantages¶
- The score is bounded between -1 for incorrect clustering and +1 for highly dense clustering. Scores around zero indicate overlapping clusters.
- The score is higher when clusters are dense and well separated, which relates to a standard concept of a cluster.
2.3.9.4.2. Drawbacks¶
- The Silhouette Coefficient is generally higher for convex clusters than other concepts of clusters, such as density based clusters like those obtained through DBSCAN.
Examples:
- Selecting the number of clusters with silhouette analysis on KMeans clustering : In this example the silhouette analysis is used to choose an optimal value for n_clusters.