nn_nll_loss {torch} | R Documentation |
Nll loss
Description
The negative log likelihood loss. It is useful to train a classification
problem with C
classes.
Usage
nn_nll_loss(weight = NULL, ignore_index = -100, reduction = "mean")
Arguments
weight |
(Tensor, optional): a manual rescaling weight given to each
class. If given, it has to be a Tensor of size |
ignore_index |
(int, optional): Specifies a target value that is ignored and does not contribute to the input gradient. |
reduction |
(string, optional): Specifies the reduction to apply to the output:
|
Details
If provided, the optional argument weight
should be a 1D Tensor assigning
weight to each of the classes. This is particularly useful when you have an
unbalanced training set.
The input
given through a forward call is expected to contain
log-probabilities of each class. input
has to be a Tensor of size either
or
with
for the
K
-dimensional case (described later).
Obtaining log-probabilities in a neural network is easily achieved by
adding a LogSoftmax
layer in the last layer of your network.
You may use CrossEntropyLoss
instead, if you prefer not to add an extra
layer.
The target
that this loss expects should be a class index in the range
where
C = number of classes
; if ignore_index
is specified, this loss also accepts
this class index (this index may not necessarily be in the class range).
The unreduced (i.e. with reduction
set to 'none'
) loss can be described as:
where is the input,
is the target,
is the weight, and
is the batch size. If
reduction
is not 'none'
(default 'mean'
), then
Can also be used for higher dimension inputs, such as 2D images, by providing
an input of size with
,
where
is the number of dimensions, and a target of appropriate shape
(see below). In the case of images, it computes NLL loss per-pixel.
Shape
Input:
where
C = number of classes
, orwith
in the case of
K
-dimensional loss.Target:
where each value is
, or
with
in the case of K-dimensional loss.
Output: scalar.
If reduction
is 'none'
, then the same size as the target: , or
with
in the case
of K-dimensional loss.
Examples
if (torch_is_installed()) {
m <- nn_log_softmax(dim = 2)
loss <- nn_nll_loss()
# input is of size N x C = 3 x 5
input <- torch_randn(3, 5, requires_grad = TRUE)
# each element in target has to have 0 <= value < C
target <- torch_tensor(c(2, 1, 5), dtype = torch_long())
output <- loss(m(input), target)
output$backward()
# 2D loss example (used, for example, with image inputs)
N <- 5
C <- 4
loss <- nn_nll_loss()
# input is of size N x C x height x width
data <- torch_randn(N, 16, 10, 10)
conv <- nn_conv2d(16, C, c(3, 3))
m <- nn_log_softmax(dim = 1)
# each element in target has to have 0 <= value < C
target <- torch_empty(N, 8, 8, dtype = torch_long())$random_(1, C)
output <- loss(m(conv(data)), target)
output$backward()
}