A tiny package to compare two neural networks in PyTorch

Overview

PyTorch Model Compare

A tiny package to compare two neural networks in PyTorch. There are many ways to compare two neural networks, but one robust and scalable way is using the Centered Kernel Alignment (CKA) metric, where the features of the networks are compared.

Centered Kernel Alignment

Centered Kernel Alignment (CKA) is a representation similarity metric that is widely used for understanding the representations learned by neural networks. Specifically, CKA takes two feature maps / representations X and Y as input and computes their normalized similarity (in terms of the Hilbert-Schmidt Independence Criterion (HSIC)) as

CKA original version

Where K and L are similarity matrices of X and Y respectively. However, the above formula is not scalable against deep architectures and large datasets. Therefore, a minibatch version can be constructed that uses an unbiased estimator of the HSIC as

alt text

alt text

The above form of CKA is from the 2021 ICLR paper by Nguyen T., Raghu M, Kornblith S.

Getting Started

Installation

pip install torch_cka

Usage

from torch_cka import CKA
model1 = resnet18(pretrained=True)  # Or any neural network of your choice
model2 = resnet34(pretrained=True)

dataloader = DataLoader(your_dataset, 
                        batch_size=batch_size, # according to your device memory
                        shuffle=False)  # Don't forget to seed your dataloader

cka = CKA(model1, model2,
          model1_name="ResNet18",   # good idea to provide names to avoid confusion
          model2_name="ResNet34",   
          model1_layers=layer_names_resnet18, # List of layers to extract features from
          model2_layers=layer_names_resnet34, # extracts all layer features by default
          device='cuda')

cka.compare(dataloader) # secondary dataloader is optional

results = cka.export()  # returns a dict that contains model names, layer names
                        # and the CKA matrix

Examples

torch_cka can be used with any pytorch model (subclass of nn.Module) and can be used with pretrained models available from popular sources like torchHub, timm, huggingface etc. Some examples of where this package can come in handy are illustrated below.

Comparing the effect of Depth

A simple experiment is to analyse the features learned by two architectures of the same family - ResNets but of different depths. Taking two ResNets - ResNet18 and ResNet34 - pre-trained on the Imagenet dataset, we can analyse how they produce their features on, say CIFAR10 for simplicity. This comparison is shown as a heatmap below.

alt text

We see high degree of similarity between the two models in lower layers as they both learn similar representations from the data. However at higher layers, the similarity reduces as the deeper model (ResNet34) learn higher order features which the is elusive to the shallower model (ResNet18). Yet, they do indeed have certain similarity in their last fc layer which acts as the feature classifier.

Comparing Two Similar Architectures

Another way of using CKA is in ablation studies. We can go further than those ablation studies that only focus on resultant performance and employ CKA to study the internal representations. Case in point - ResNet50 and WideResNet50 (k=2). WideResNet50 has the same architecture as ResNet50 except having wider residual bottleneck layers (by a factor of 2 in this case).

alt text

We clearly notice that the learned features are indeed different after the first few layers. The width has a more pronounced effect in deeper layers as compared to the earlier layers as both networks seem to learn similar features in the initial layers.

As a bonus, here is a comparison between ViT and the latest SOTA model Swin Transformer pretrained on ImageNet22k.

alt text

Comparing quite different architectures

CNNs have been analysed a lot over the past decade since AlexNet. We somewhat know what sort of features they learn across their layers (through visualizations) and we have put them to good use. One interesting approach is to compare these understandable features with newer models that don't permit easy visualizations (like recent vision transformer architectures) and study them. This has indeed been a hot research topic (see Raghu et.al 2021).

alt text

Comparing Datasets

Yet another application is to compare two datasets - preferably two versions of the data. This is especially useful in production where data drift is a known issue. If you have an updated version of a dataset, you can study how your model will perform on it by comparing the representations of the datasets. This can be more telling about actual performance than simply comparing the datasets directly.

This can also be quite useful in studying the performance of a model on downstream tasks and fine-tuning. For instance, if the CKA score is high for some features on different datasets, then those can be frozen during fine-tuning. As an example, the following figure compares the features of a pretrained Resnet50 on the Imagenet test data and the VOC dataset. Clearly, the pretrained features have little correlation with the VOC dataset. Therefore, we have to resort to fine-tuning to get at least satisfactory results.

alt text

Tips

  • If your model is large (lots of layers or large feature maps), try to extract from select layers. This is to avoid out of memory issues.
  • If you still want to compare the entire feature map, you can run it multiple times with few layers at each iteration and export your data using cka.export(). The exported data can then be concatenated to produce the full CKA matrix.
  • Give proper model names to avoid confusion when interpreting the results. The code automatically extracts the model name for you by default, but it is good practice to label the models according to your use case.
  • When providing your dataloader(s) to the compare() function, it is important that they are seeded properly for reproducibility.
  • When comparing datasets, be sure to set drop_last=True when building the dataloader. This resolves shape mismatch issues - especially in differently sized datasets.

Citation

If you use this repo in your project or research, please cite as -

@software{subramanian2021torch_cka,
    author={Anand Subramanian},
    title={torch_cka},
    url={https://github.com/AntixK/PyTorch-Model-Compare},
    year={2021}
}
Owner
Anand Krishnamoorthy
Research Engineer
Anand Krishnamoorthy
Fast Discounted Cumulative Sums in PyTorch

TODO: update this README! Fast Discounted Cumulative Sums in PyTorch This repository implements an efficient parallel algorithm for the computation of

Daniel Povey 7 Feb 17, 2022
PyTorch Implementation of [1611.06440] Pruning Convolutional Neural Networks for Resource Efficient Inference

PyTorch implementation of [1611.06440 Pruning Convolutional Neural Networks for Resource Efficient Inference] This demonstrates pruning a VGG16 based

Jacob Gildenblat 836 Dec 26, 2022
A pure Python implementation of Compact Bilinear Pooling and Count Sketch for PyTorch.

Compact Bilinear Pooling for PyTorch. This repository has a pure Python implementation of Compact Bilinear Pooling and Count Sketch for PyTorch. This

Grégoire Payen de La Garanderie 234 Dec 07, 2022
High-fidelity performance metrics for generative models in PyTorch

High-fidelity performance metrics for generative models in PyTorch

Vikram Voleti 5 Oct 24, 2021
A few Windows specific scripts for PyTorch

It is a repo that contains scripts that makes using PyTorch on Windows easier. Easy Installation Update: Starting from 0.4.0, you can go to the offici

408 Dec 15, 2022
Riemannian Adaptive Optimization Methods with pytorch optim

geoopt Manifold aware pytorch.optim. Unofficial implementation for “Riemannian Adaptive Optimization Methods” ICLR2019 and more. Installation Make sur

642 Jan 03, 2023
Pretrained ConvNets for pytorch: NASNet, ResNeXt, ResNet, InceptionV4, InceptionResnetV2, Xception, DPN, etc.

Pretrained models for Pytorch (Work in progress) The goal of this repo is: to help to reproduce research papers results (transfer learning setups for

Remi 8.7k Dec 31, 2022
Differentiable SDE solvers with GPU support and efficient sensitivity analysis.

PyTorch Implementation of Differentiable SDE Solvers This library provides stochastic differential equation (SDE) solvers with GPU support and efficie

Google Research 1.2k Jan 04, 2023
Tacotron 2 - PyTorch implementation with faster-than-realtime inference

Tacotron 2 (without wavenet) PyTorch implementation of Natural TTS Synthesis By Conditioning Wavenet On Mel Spectrogram Predictions. This implementati

NVIDIA Corporation 4.1k Jan 03, 2023
A simple way to train and use PyTorch models with multi-GPU, TPU, mixed-precision

🤗 Accelerate was created for PyTorch users who like to write the training loop of PyTorch models but are reluctant to write and maintain the boilerplate code needed to use multi-GPUs/TPU/fp16.

Hugging Face 3.5k Jan 08, 2023
Distiller is an open-source Python package for neural network compression research.

Wiki and tutorials | Documentation | Getting Started | Algorithms | Design | FAQ Distiller is an open-source Python package for neural network compres

Intel Labs 4.1k Dec 28, 2022
A PyTorch implementation of Learning to learn by gradient descent by gradient descent

Intro PyTorch implementation of Learning to learn by gradient descent by gradient descent. Run python main.py TODO Initial implementation Toy data LST

Ilya Kostrikov 300 Dec 11, 2022
Fast, general, and tested differentiable structured prediction in PyTorch

Torch-Struct: Structured Prediction Library A library of tested, GPU implementations of core structured prediction algorithms for deep learning applic

HNLP 1.1k Jan 07, 2023
Training PyTorch models with differential privacy

Opacus is a library that enables training PyTorch models with differential privacy. It supports training with minimal code changes required on the cli

1.3k Dec 29, 2022
PyTorch Extension Library of Optimized Scatter Operations

PyTorch Scatter Documentation This package consists of a small extension library of highly optimized sparse update (scatter and segment) operations fo

Matthias Fey 1.2k Jan 07, 2023
S3-plugin is a high performance PyTorch dataset library to efficiently access datasets stored in S3 buckets.

S3-plugin is a high performance PyTorch dataset library to efficiently access datasets stored in S3 buckets.

Amazon Web Services 138 Jan 03, 2023
PyTorch Lightning Optical Flow models, scripts, and pretrained weights.

PyTorch Lightning Optical Flow models, scripts, and pretrained weights.

Henrique Morimitsu 105 Dec 16, 2022
A tutorial on "Bayesian Compression for Deep Learning" published at NIPS (2017).

Code release for "Bayesian Compression for Deep Learning" In "Bayesian Compression for Deep Learning" we adopt a Bayesian view for the compression of

Karen Ullrich 190 Dec 30, 2022
A very simple and small path tracer written in pytorch meant to be run on the GPU

MentisOculi Pytorch Path Tracer A very simple and small path tracer written in pytorch meant to be run on the GPU Why use pytorch and not some other c

Matthew B. Mirman 222 Dec 01, 2022
A Closer Look at Structured Pruning for Neural Network Compression

A Closer Look at Structured Pruning for Neural Network Compression Code used to reproduce experiments in https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.04622. To prune, w

Bayesian and Neural Systems Group 140 Dec 05, 2022