📚 go-deep - Awesome Go Library for Machine Learning
A feature-rich neural network library in Go.
🏷️ Machine Learning
📂 Libraries for Machine Learning.
⭐ 532 stars
Detailed Description of go-deep
go-deep
Feed forward/backpropagation neural network implementation. Currently supports:
- Activation functions: sigmoid, hyperbolic, ReLU
- Solvers: SGD, SGD with momentum/nesterov, Adam
- Classification modes: regression, multi-class, multi-label, binary
- Supports batch training in parallel
- Bias nodes
Networks are modeled as a set of neurons connected through synapses. No GPU computations - don't use this for any large scale applications.
Install
go get -u github.com/patrikeh/go-deep
Usage
Import the go-deep package
import (
"fmt"
deep "github.com/patrikeh/go-deep"
"github.com/patrikeh/go-deep/training"
)
Define some data...
var data = training.Examples{
{[]float64{2.7810836, 2.550537003}, []float64{0}},
{[]float64{1.465489372, 2.362125076}, []float64{0}},
{[]float64{3.396561688, 4.400293529}, []float64{0}},
{[]float64{1.38807019, 1.850220317}, []float64{0}},
{[]float64{7.627531214, 2.759262235}, []float64{1}},
{[]float64{5.332441248, 2.088626775}, []float64{1}},
{[]float64{6.922596716, 1.77106367}, []float64{1}},
{[]float64{8.675418651, -0.242068655}, []float64{1}},
}
Create a network with two hidden layers of size 2 and 2 respectively:
n := deep.NewNeural(&deep.Config{
/* Input dimensionality */
Inputs: 2,
/* Two hidden layers consisting of two neurons each, and a single output */
Layout: []int{2, 2, 1},
/* Activation functions: Sigmoid, Tanh, ReLU, Linear */
Activation: deep.ActivationSigmoid,
/* Determines output layer activation & loss function:
ModeRegression: linear outputs with MSE loss
ModeMultiClass: softmax output with Cross Entropy loss
ModeMultiLabel: sigmoid output with Cross Entropy loss
ModeBinary: sigmoid output with binary CE loss */
Mode: deep.ModeBinary,
/* Weight initializers: {deep.NewNormal(μ, σ), deep.NewUniform(μ, σ)} */
Weight: deep.NewNormal(1.0, 0.0),
/* Apply bias */
Bias: true,
})
Train:
// params: learning rate, momentum, alpha decay, nesterov
optimizer := training.NewSGD(0.05, 0.1, 1e-6, true)
// params: optimizer, verbosity (print stats at every 50th iteration)
trainer := training.NewTrainer(optimizer, 50)
training, heldout := data.Split(0.5)
trainer.Train(n, training, heldout, 1000) // training, validation, iterations
resulting in:
Epochs Elapsed Error
--- --- ---
5 12.938µs 0.36438
10 125.691µs 0.02261
15 177.194µs 0.00404
...
1000 10.703839ms 0.00000
Finally, make some predictions:
fmt.Println(data[0].Input, "=>", n.Predict(data[0].Input))
fmt.Println(data[5].Input, "=>", n.Predict(data[5].Input))
Alternatively, batch training can be performed in parallell:
optimizer := NewAdam(0.001, 0.9, 0.999, 1e-8)
// params: optimizer, verbosity (print info at every n:th iteration), batch-size, number of workers
trainer := training.NewBatchTrainer(optimizer, 1, 200, 4)
training, heldout := data.Split(0.75)
trainer.Train(n, training, heldout, 1000) // training, validation, iterations
Examples
See training/trainer_test.go
for a variety of toy examples of regression, multi-class classification, binary classification, etc.
See examples/
for more realistic examples:
Dataset | Topology | Epochs | Accuracy |
---|---|---|---|
wines | [5 5] | 10000 | ~98% |
mnist | [50] | 25 | ~97% |