2.4 C
United States of America
Monday, November 25, 2024

Introductory time-series forecasting with torch


That is the primary publish in a collection introducing time-series forecasting with torch. It does assume some prior expertise with torch and/or deep studying. However so far as time collection are involved, it begins proper from the start, utilizing recurrent neural networks (GRU or LSTM) to foretell how one thing develops in time.

On this publish, we construct a community that makes use of a sequence of observations to foretell a price for the very subsequent time limit. What if we’d wish to forecast a sequence of values, equivalent to, say, every week or a month of measurements?

One factor we might do is feed again into the system the beforehand forecasted worth; that is one thing we’ll strive on the finish of this publish. Subsequent posts will discover different choices, a few of them involving considerably extra advanced architectures. It will likely be attention-grabbing to match their performances; however the important purpose is to introduce some torch “recipes” you can apply to your personal information.

We begin by inspecting the dataset used. It’s a low-dimensional, however fairly polyvalent and sophisticated one.

The vic_elec dataset, accessible by way of bundle tsibbledata, gives three years of half-hourly electrical energy demand for Victoria, Australia, augmented by same-resolution temperature data and a day by day vacation indicator.

Rows: 52,608
Columns: 5
$ Time        <dttm> 2012-01-01 00:00:00, 2012-01-01 00:30:00, 2012-01-01 01:00:00,…
$ Demand      <dbl> 4382.825, 4263.366, 4048.966, 3877.563, 4036.230, 3865.597, 369…
$ Temperature <dbl> 21.40, 21.05, 20.70, 20.55, 20.40, 20.25, 20.10, 19.60, 19.10, …
$ Date        <date> 2012-01-01, 2012-01-01, 2012-01-01, 2012-01-01, 2012-01-01, 20…
$ Vacation     <lgl> TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, TRU…

Relying on what subset of variables is used, and whether or not and the way information is temporally aggregated, these information might serve as an instance quite a lot of totally different strategies. For instance, within the third version of Forecasting: Rules and Apply day by day averages are used to show quadratic regression with ARMA errors. On this first introductory publish although, in addition to in most of its successors, we’ll try to forecast Demand with out counting on further data, and we maintain the unique decision.

To get an impression of how electrical energy demand varies over totally different timescales. Let’s examine information for 2 months that properly illustrate the U-shaped relationship between temperature and demand: January, 2014 and July, 2014.

First, right here is July.

vic_elec_2014 <-  vic_elec %>%
  filter(12 months(Date) == 2014) %>%
  choose(-c(Date, Vacation)) %>%
  mutate(Demand = scale(Demand), Temperature = scale(Temperature)) %>%
  pivot_longer(-Time, names_to = "variable") %>%
  update_tsibble(key = variable)

vic_elec_2014 %>% filter(month(Time) == 7) %>% 
  autoplot() + 
  scale_colour_manual(values = c("#08c5d1", "#00353f")) +
  theme_minimal()

Temperature and electricity demand (normalized). Victoria, Australia, 07/2014.

Determine 1: Temperature and electrical energy demand (normalized). Victoria, Australia, 07/2014.

It’s winter; temperature fluctuates beneath common, whereas electrical energy demand is above common (heating). There may be robust variation over the course of the day; we see troughs within the demand curve equivalent to ridges within the temperature graph, and vice versa. Whereas diurnal variation dominates, there is also variation over the times of the week. Between weeks although, we don’t see a lot distinction.

Evaluate this with the information for January:

vic_elec_2014 %>% filter(month(Time) == 1) %>% 
  autoplot() + 
  scale_colour_manual(values = c("#08c5d1", "#00353f")) +
  theme_minimal()

Temperature and electricity demand (normalized). Victoria, Australia, 01/2014.

Determine 2: Temperature and electrical energy demand (normalized). Victoria, Australia, 01/2014.

We nonetheless see the robust circadian variation. We nonetheless see some day-of-week variation. However now it’s excessive temperatures that trigger elevated demand (cooling). Additionally, there are two intervals of unusually excessive temperatures, accompanied by distinctive demand. We anticipate that in a univariate forecast, not taking into consideration temperature, this shall be laborious – and even, unattainable – to forecast.

Let’s see a concise portrait of how Demand behaves utilizing feasts::STL(). First, right here is the decomposition for July:

vic_elec_2014 <-  vic_elec %>%
  filter(12 months(Date) == 2014) %>%
  choose(-c(Date, Vacation))

cmp <- vic_elec_2014 %>% filter(month(Time) == 7) %>%
  mannequin(STL(Demand)) %>% 
  parts()

cmp %>% autoplot()

STL decomposition of electricity demand. Victoria, Australia, 07/2014.

Determine 3: STL decomposition of electrical energy demand. Victoria, Australia, 07/2014.

And right here, for January:


STL decomposition of electricity demand. Victoria, Australia, 01/2014.

Determine 4: STL decomposition of electrical energy demand. Victoria, Australia, 01/2014.

Each properly illustrate the robust circadian and weekly seasonalities (with diurnal variation considerably stronger in January). If we glance intently, we are able to even see how the pattern part is extra influential in January than in July. This once more hints at a lot stronger difficulties predicting the January than the July developments.

Now that now we have an thought what awaits us, let’s start by making a torch dataset.

Here’s what we intend to do. We need to begin our journey into forecasting by utilizing a sequence of observations to foretell their rapid successor. In different phrases, the enter (x) for every batch merchandise is a vector, whereas the goal (y) is a single worth. The size of the enter sequence, x, is parameterized as n_timesteps, the variety of consecutive observations to extrapolate from.

The dataset will mirror this in its .getitem() methodology. When requested for the observations at index i, it should return tensors like so:

listing(
      x = self$x[start:end],
      y = self$x[end+1]
)

the place begin:finish is a vector of indices, of size n_timesteps, and finish+1 is a single index.

Now, if the dataset simply iterated over its enter so as, advancing the index one after the other, these traces might merely learn

listing(
      x = self$x[i:(i + self$n_timesteps - 1)],
      y = self$x[self$n_timesteps + i]
)

Since many sequences within the information are related, we are able to cut back coaching time by making use of a fraction of the information in each epoch. This may be achieved by (optionally) passing a sample_frac smaller than 1. In initialize(), a random set of begin indices is ready; .getitem() then simply does what it usually does: search for the (x,y) pair at a given index.

Right here is the whole dataset code:

elec_dataset <- dataset(
  title = "elec_dataset",
  
  initialize = operate(x, n_timesteps, sample_frac = 1) {

    self$n_timesteps <- n_timesteps
    self$x <- torch_tensor((x - train_mean) / train_sd)
    
    n <- size(self$x) - self$n_timesteps 
    
    self$begins <- type(pattern.int(
      n = n,
      dimension = n * sample_frac
    ))

  },
  
  .getitem = operate(i) {
    
    begin <- self$begins[i]
    finish <- begin + self$n_timesteps - 1
    
    listing(
      x = self$x[start:end],
      y = self$x[end + 1]
    )

  },
  
  .size = operate() {
    size(self$begins) 
  }
)

You’ll have seen that we normalize the information by globally outlined train_mean and train_sd. We but must calculate these.

The best way we cut up the information is easy. We use the entire of 2012 for coaching, and all of 2013 for validation. For testing, we take the “tough” month of January, 2014. You’re invited to match testing outcomes for July that very same 12 months, and examine performances.

vic_elec_get_year <- operate(12 months, month = NULL) {
  vic_elec %>%
    filter(12 months(Date) == 12 months, month(Date) == if (is.null(month)) month(Date) else month) %>%
    as_tibble() %>%
    choose(Demand)
}

elec_train <- vic_elec_get_year(2012) %>% as.matrix()
elec_valid <- vic_elec_get_year(2013) %>% as.matrix()
elec_test <- vic_elec_get_year(2014, 1) %>% as.matrix() # or 2014, 7, alternatively

train_mean <- imply(elec_train)
train_sd <- sd(elec_train)

Now, to instantiate a dataset, we nonetheless want to choose sequence size. From prior inspection, every week looks like a good selection.

n_timesteps <- 7 * 24 * 2 # days * hours * half-hours

Now we are able to go forward and create a dataset for the coaching information. Let’s say we’ll make use of fifty% of the information in every epoch:

train_ds <- elec_dataset(elec_train, n_timesteps, sample_frac = 0.5)
size(train_ds)
 8615

Fast test: Are the shapes appropriate?

$x
torch_tensor
-0.4141
-0.5541
[...]       ### traces eliminated by me
 0.8204
 0.9399
... [the output was truncated (use n=-1 to disable)]
[ CPUFloatType{336,1} ]

$y
torch_tensor
-0.6771
[ CPUFloatType{1} ]

Sure: That is what we needed to see. The enter sequence has n_timesteps values within the first dimension, and a single one within the second, equivalent to the one characteristic current, Demand. As meant, the prediction tensor holds a single worth, corresponding– as we all know – to n_timesteps+1.

That takes care of a single input-output pair. As common, batching is organized for by torch’s dataloader class. We instantiate one for the coaching information, and instantly once more confirm the result:

batch_size <- 32
train_dl <- train_ds %>% dataloader(batch_size = batch_size, shuffle = TRUE)
size(train_dl)

b <- train_dl %>% dataloader_make_iter() %>% dataloader_next()
b
$x
torch_tensor
(1,.,.) = 
  0.4805
  0.3125
[...]       ### traces eliminated by me
 -1.1756
 -0.9981
... [the output was truncated (use n=-1 to disable)]
[ CPUFloatType{32,336,1} ]

$y
torch_tensor
 0.1890
 0.5405
[...]       ### traces eliminated by me
 2.4015
 0.7891
... [the output was truncated (use n=-1 to disable)]
[ CPUFloatType{32,1} ]

We see the added batch dimension in entrance, leading to total form (batch_size, n_timesteps, num_features). That is the format anticipated by the mannequin, or extra exactly, by its preliminary RNN layer.

Earlier than we go on, let’s shortly create datasets and dataloaders for validation and take a look at information, as nicely.

valid_ds <- elec_dataset(elec_valid, n_timesteps, sample_frac = 0.5)
valid_dl <- valid_ds %>% dataloader(batch_size = batch_size)

test_ds <- elec_dataset(elec_test, n_timesteps)
test_dl <- test_ds %>% dataloader(batch_size = 1)

The mannequin consists of an RNN – of sort GRU or LSTM, as per the person’s alternative – and an output layer. The RNN does many of the work; the single-neuron linear layer that outputs the prediction compresses its vector enter to a single worth.

Right here, first, is the mannequin definition.

mannequin <- nn_module(
  
  initialize = operate(sort, input_size, hidden_size, num_layers = 1, dropout = 0) {
    
    self$sort <- sort
    self$num_layers <- num_layers
    
    self$rnn <- if (self$sort == "gru") {
      nn_gru(
        input_size = input_size,
        hidden_size = hidden_size,
        num_layers = num_layers,
        dropout = dropout,
        batch_first = TRUE
      )
    } else {
      nn_lstm(
        input_size = input_size,
        hidden_size = hidden_size,
        num_layers = num_layers,
        dropout = dropout,
        batch_first = TRUE
      )
    }
    
    self$output <- nn_linear(hidden_size, 1)
    
  },
  
  ahead = operate(x) {
    
    # listing of [output, hidden]
    # we use the output, which is of dimension (batch_size, n_timesteps, hidden_size)
    x <- self$rnn(x)[[1]]
    
    # from the output, we solely need the ultimate timestep
    # form now's (batch_size, hidden_size)
    x <- x[ , dim(x)[2], ]
    
    # feed this to a single output neuron
    # remaining form then is (batch_size, 1)
    x %>% self$output() 
  }
  
)

Most significantly, that is what occurs in ahead().

  1. The RNN returns an inventory. The listing holds two tensors, an output, and a synopsis of hidden states. We discard the state tensor, and maintain the output solely. The excellence between state and output, or reasonably, the best way it’s mirrored in what a torch RNN returns, deserves to be inspected extra intently. We’ll do this in a second.

  2. Of the output tensor, we’re eager about solely the ultimate time-step, although.

  3. Solely this one, thus, is handed to the output layer.

  4. Lastly, the stated output layer’s output is returned.

Now, a bit extra on states vs. outputs. Think about Fig. 1, from Goodfellow, Bengio, and Courville (2016).

Let’s fake there are three time steps solely, equivalent to (t-1), (t), and (t+1). The enter sequence, accordingly, consists of (x_{t-1}), (x_{t}), and (x_{t+1}).

At every (t), a hidden state is generated, and so is an output. Usually, if our purpose is to foretell (y_{t+2}), that’s, the very subsequent remark, we need to consider the whole enter sequence. Put in another way, we need to have run by way of the whole equipment of state updates. The logical factor to do would thus be to decide on (o_{t+1}), for both direct return from ahead() or for additional processing.

Certainly, return (o_{t+1}) is what a Keras LSTM or GRU would do by default. Not so its torch counterparts. In torch, the output tensor contains all of (o). That is why, in step two above, we choose the only time step we’re eager about – particularly, the final one.

In later posts, we are going to make use of greater than the final time step. Typically, we’ll use the sequence of hidden states (the (h)s) as an alternative of the outputs (the (o)s). So it’s possible you’ll really feel like asking, what if we used (h_{t+1}) right here as an alternative of (o_{t+1})? The reply is: With a GRU, this may not make a distinction, as these two are similar. With LSTM although, it could, as LSTM retains a second, particularly, the “cell,” state.

On to initialize(). For ease of experimentation, we instantiate both a GRU or an LSTM primarily based on person enter. Two issues are value noting:

  • We go batch_first = TRUE when creating the RNNs. That is required with torch RNNs once we need to persistently have batch objects stacked within the first dimension. And we do need that; it’s arguably much less complicated than a change of dimension semantics for one sub-type of module.

  • num_layers can be utilized to construct a stacked RNN, equivalent to what you’d get in Keras when chaining two GRUs/LSTMs (the primary one created with return_sequences = TRUE). This parameter, too, we’ve included for fast experimentation.

Let’s instantiate a mannequin for coaching. It will likely be a single-layer GRU with thirty-two models.

# coaching RNNs on the GPU at present prints a warning which will muddle 
# the console
# see https://github.com/mlverse/torch/points/461
# alternatively, use 
# machine <- "cpu"
machine <- torch_device(if (cuda_is_available()) "cuda" else "cpu")

internet <- mannequin("gru", 1, 32)
internet <- internet$to(machine = machine)

In spite of everything these RNN specifics, the coaching course of is totally normal.

optimizer <- optim_adam(internet$parameters, lr = 0.001)

num_epochs <- 30

train_batch <- operate(b) {
  
  optimizer$zero_grad()
  output <- internet(b$x$to(machine = machine))
  goal <- b$y$to(machine = machine)
  
  loss <- nnf_mse_loss(output, goal)
  loss$backward()
  optimizer$step()
  
  loss$merchandise()
}

valid_batch <- operate(b) {
  
  output <- internet(b$x$to(machine = machine))
  goal <- b$y$to(machine = machine)
  
  loss <- nnf_mse_loss(output, goal)
  loss$merchandise()
  
}

for (epoch in 1:num_epochs) {
  
  internet$prepare()
  train_loss <- c()
  
  coro::loop(for (b in train_dl) {
    loss <-train_batch(b)
    train_loss <- c(train_loss, loss)
  })
  
  cat(sprintf("nEpoch %d, coaching: loss: %3.5f n", epoch, imply(train_loss)))
  
  internet$eval()
  valid_loss <- c()
  
  coro::loop(for (b in valid_dl) {
    loss <- valid_batch(b)
    valid_loss <- c(valid_loss, loss)
  })
  
  cat(sprintf("nEpoch %d, validation: loss: %3.5f n", epoch, imply(valid_loss)))
}
Epoch 1, coaching: loss: 0.21908 

Epoch 1, validation: loss: 0.05125 

Epoch 2, coaching: loss: 0.03245 

Epoch 2, validation: loss: 0.03391 

Epoch 3, coaching: loss: 0.02346 

Epoch 3, validation: loss: 0.02321 

Epoch 4, coaching: loss: 0.01823 

Epoch 4, validation: loss: 0.01838 

Epoch 5, coaching: loss: 0.01522 

Epoch 5, validation: loss: 0.01560 

Epoch 6, coaching: loss: 0.01315 

Epoch 6, validation: loss: 0.01374 

Epoch 7, coaching: loss: 0.01205 

Epoch 7, validation: loss: 0.01200 

Epoch 8, coaching: loss: 0.01155 

Epoch 8, validation: loss: 0.01157 

Epoch 9, coaching: loss: 0.01118 

Epoch 9, validation: loss: 0.01096 

Epoch 10, coaching: loss: 0.01070 

Epoch 10, validation: loss: 0.01132 

Epoch 11, coaching: loss: 0.01003 

Epoch 11, validation: loss: 0.01150 

Epoch 12, coaching: loss: 0.00943 

Epoch 12, validation: loss: 0.01106 

Epoch 13, coaching: loss: 0.00922 

Epoch 13, validation: loss: 0.01069 

Epoch 14, coaching: loss: 0.00862 

Epoch 14, validation: loss: 0.01125 

Epoch 15, coaching: loss: 0.00842 

Epoch 15, validation: loss: 0.01095 

Epoch 16, coaching: loss: 0.00820 

Epoch 16, validation: loss: 0.00975 

Epoch 17, coaching: loss: 0.00802 

Epoch 17, validation: loss: 0.01120 

Epoch 18, coaching: loss: 0.00781 

Epoch 18, validation: loss: 0.00990 

Epoch 19, coaching: loss: 0.00757 

Epoch 19, validation: loss: 0.01017 

Epoch 20, coaching: loss: 0.00735 

Epoch 20, validation: loss: 0.00932 

Epoch 21, coaching: loss: 0.00723 

Epoch 21, validation: loss: 0.00901 

Epoch 22, coaching: loss: 0.00708 

Epoch 22, validation: loss: 0.00890 

Epoch 23, coaching: loss: 0.00676 

Epoch 23, validation: loss: 0.00914 

Epoch 24, coaching: loss: 0.00666 

Epoch 24, validation: loss: 0.00922 

Epoch 25, coaching: loss: 0.00644 

Epoch 25, validation: loss: 0.00869 

Epoch 26, coaching: loss: 0.00620 

Epoch 26, validation: loss: 0.00902 

Epoch 27, coaching: loss: 0.00588 

Epoch 27, validation: loss: 0.00896 

Epoch 28, coaching: loss: 0.00563 

Epoch 28, validation: loss: 0.00886 

Epoch 29, coaching: loss: 0.00547 

Epoch 29, validation: loss: 0.00895 

Epoch 30, coaching: loss: 0.00523 

Epoch 30, validation: loss: 0.00935 

Loss decreases shortly, and we don’t appear to be overfitting on the validation set.

Numbers are fairly summary, although. So, we’ll use the take a look at set to see how the forecast really appears to be like.

Right here is the forecast for January, 2014, thirty minutes at a time.

internet$eval()

preds <- rep(NA, n_timesteps)

coro::loop(for (b in test_dl) {
  output <- internet(b$x$to(machine = machine))
  preds <- c(preds, output %>% as.numeric())
})

vic_elec_jan_2014 <-  vic_elec %>%
  filter(12 months(Date) == 2014, month(Date) == 1) %>%
  choose(Demand)

preds_ts <- vic_elec_jan_2014 %>%
  add_column(forecast = preds * train_sd + train_mean) %>%
  pivot_longer(-Time) %>%
  update_tsibble(key = title)

preds_ts %>%
  autoplot() +
  scale_colour_manual(values = c("#08c5d1", "#00353f")) +
  theme_minimal()

One-step-ahead predictions for January, 2014.

Determine 6: One-step-ahead predictions for January, 2014.

General, the forecast is great, however it’s attention-grabbing to see how the forecast “regularizes” essentially the most excessive peaks. This type of “regression to the imply” shall be seen way more strongly in later setups, once we attempt to forecast additional into the long run.

Can we use our present structure for multi-step prediction? We will.

One factor we are able to do is feed again the present prediction, that’s, append it to the enter sequence as quickly as it’s accessible. Successfully thus, for every batch merchandise, we receive a sequence of predictions in a loop.

We’ll attempt to forecast 336 time steps, that’s, a whole week.

n_forecast <- 2 * 24 * 7

test_preds <- vector(mode = "listing", size = size(test_dl))

i <- 1

coro::loop(for (b in test_dl) {
  
  enter <- b$x
  output <- internet(enter$to(machine = machine))
  preds <- as.numeric(output)
  
  for(j in 2:n_forecast) {
    enter <- torch_cat(listing(enter[ , 2:length(input), ], output$view(c(1, 1, 1))), dim = 2)
    output <- internet(enter$to(machine = machine))
    preds <- c(preds, as.numeric(output))
  }
  
  test_preds[[i]] <- preds
  i <<- i + 1
  
})

For visualization, let’s decide three non-overlapping sequences.

test_pred1 <- test_preds[[1]]
test_pred1 <- c(rep(NA, n_timesteps), test_pred1, rep(NA, nrow(vic_elec_jan_2014) - n_timesteps - n_forecast))

test_pred2 <- test_preds[[408]]
test_pred2 <- c(rep(NA, n_timesteps + 407), test_pred2, rep(NA, nrow(vic_elec_jan_2014) - 407 - n_timesteps - n_forecast))

test_pred3 <- test_preds[[817]]
test_pred3 <- c(rep(NA, nrow(vic_elec_jan_2014) - n_forecast), test_pred3)


preds_ts <- vic_elec %>%
  filter(12 months(Date) == 2014, month(Date) == 1) %>%
  choose(Demand) %>%
  add_column(
    iterative_ex_1 = test_pred1 * train_sd + train_mean,
    iterative_ex_2 = test_pred2 * train_sd + train_mean,
    iterative_ex_3 = test_pred3 * train_sd + train_mean) %>%
  pivot_longer(-Time) %>%
  update_tsibble(key = title)

preds_ts %>%
  autoplot() +
  scale_colour_manual(values = c("#08c5d1", "#00353f", "#ffbf66", "#d46f4d")) +
  theme_minimal()

Multi-step predictions for January, 2014, obtained in a loop.

Determine 7: Multi-step predictions for January, 2014, obtained in a loop.

Even with this very primary forecasting approach, the diurnal rhythm is preserved, albeit in a strongly smoothed type. There even is an obvious day-of-week periodicity within the forecast. We do see, nevertheless, very robust regression to the imply, even in loop situations the place the community was “primed” with a better enter sequence.

Hopefully this publish supplied a helpful introduction to time collection forecasting with torch. Evidently, we picked a difficult time collection – difficult, that’s, for not less than two causes:

  • To appropriately issue within the pattern, exterior data is required: exterior data in type of a temperature forecast, which, “in actuality,” could be simply obtainable.

  • Along with the extremely essential pattern part, the information are characterised by a number of ranges of seasonality.

Of those, the latter is much less of an issue for the strategies we’re working with right here. If we discovered that some degree of seasonality went undetected, we might attempt to adapt the present configuration in numerous uncomplicated methods:

  • Use an LSTM as an alternative of a GRU. In concept, LSTM ought to higher be capable to seize further lower-frequency parts on account of its secondary storage, the cell state.

  • Stack a number of layers of GRU/LSTM. In concept, this could permit for studying a hierarchy of temporal options, analogously to what we see in a convolutional neural community.

To deal with the previous impediment, larger modifications to the structure could be wanted. We might try to try this in a later, “bonus,” publish. However within the upcoming installments, we’ll first dive into often-used strategies for sequence prediction, additionally porting to numerical time collection issues which can be generally performed in pure language processing.

Thanks for studying!

Picture by Nick Dunn on Unsplash

Goodfellow, Ian, Yoshua Bengio, and Aaron Courville. 2016. Deep Studying. MIT Press.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Articles