序列模型是一个线性的层次堆栈。
你可以通过传递一系列 layer 实例给构造器来创建一个序列模型。
The Sequential
model is a linear stack of layers.
You can create a Sequential
model by passing a list of layer instances to the constructor:
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Activation
model = Sequential([
Dense(32, input_shape=(784,)),
Activation('relu'),
Dense(10),
Activation('softmax'),
])
也可以简单的添加 layer 通过 .add() 函数。
You can also simply add layers via the .add()
method:
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(32, input_dim=784))
model.add(Activation('relu'))
The model needs to know what input shape it should expect. For this reason, the first layer in a Sequential
model (and only the first, because following layers can do automatic shape inference) needs to receive information about its input shape. There are several possible ways to do this:
input_shape
argument to the first layer. This is a shape tuple (a tuple of integers or None
entries, where None
indicates that any positive integer may be expected). In input_shape
, the batch dimension is not included.Dense
, support the specification of their input shape via the argument input_dim
, and some 3D temporal layers support the arguments input_dim
and input_length
.batch_size
argument to a layer. If you pass both batch_size=32
and input_shape=(6, 8)
to a layer, it will then expect every batch of inputs to have the batch shape (32, 6, 8)
.As such, the following snippets are strictly equivalent:
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(32, input_shape=(784,)))
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(32, input_dim=784))
Before training a model, you need to configure the learning process, which is done via the compile
method. It receives three arguments:
rmsprop
or adagrad
), or an instance of the Optimizer
class. See: optimizers.categorical_crossentropy
or mse
), or it can be an objective function. See: losses.metrics=['accuracy']
. A metric could be the string identifier of an existing metric or a custom metric function.# For a multi-class classification problem
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='categorical_crossentropy',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# For a binary classification problem
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='binary_crossentropy',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# For a mean squared error regression problem
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='mse')
# For custom metrics
import keras.backend as K
def mean_pred(y_true, y_pred):
return K.mean(y_pred)
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='binary_crossentropy',
metrics=['accuracy', mean_pred])
Keras models are trained on Numpy arrays of input data and labels. For training a model, you will typically use the fit
function. Read its documentation here.
# For a single-input model with 2 classes (binary classification):
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(32, activation='relu', input_dim=100))
model.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='binary_crossentropy',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# Generate dummy data
import numpy as np
data = np.random.random((1000, 100))
labels = np.random.randint(2, size=(1000, 1))
# Train the model, iterating on the data in batches of 32 samples
model.fit(data, labels, epochs=10, batch_size=32)
# For a single-input model with 10 classes (categorical classification):
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(32, activation='relu', input_dim=100))
model.add(Dense(10, activation='softmax'))
model.compile(optimizer='rmsprop',
loss='categorical_crossentropy',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# Generate dummy data
import numpy as np
data = np.random.random((1000, 100))
labels = np.random.randint(10, size=(1000, 1))
# Convert labels to categorical one-hot encoding
one_hot_labels = keras.utils.to_categorical(labels, num_classes=10)
# Train the model, iterating on the data in batches of 32 samples
model.fit(data, one_hot_labels, epochs=10, batch_size=32)
Here are a few examples to get you started!
In the examples folder, you will also find example models for real datasets:
…and more.
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Dropout, Activation
from keras.optimizers import SGD
# Generate dummy data
import numpy as np
x_train = np.random.random((1000, 20))
y_train = keras.utils.to_categorical(np.random.randint(10, size=(1000, 1)), num_classes=10)
x_test = np.random.random((100, 20))
y_test = keras.utils.to_categorical(np.random.randint(10, size=(100, 1)), num_classes=10)
model = Sequential()
# Dense(64) is a fully-connected layer with 64 hidden units.
# in the first layer, you must specify the expected input data shape:
# here, 20-dimensional vectors.
model.add(Dense(64, activation='relu', input_dim=20))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(64, activation='relu'))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(10, activation='softmax'))
sgd = SGD(lr=0.01, decay=1e-6, momentum=0.9, nesterov=True)
model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy',
optimizer=sgd,
metrics=['accuracy'])
model.fit(x_train, y_train,
epochs=20,
batch_size=128)
score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, batch_size=128)
import numpy as np
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Dropout
# Generate dummy data
x_train = np.random.random((1000, 20))
y_train = np.random.randint(2, size=(1000, 1))
x_test = np.random.random((100, 20))
y_test = np.random.randint(2, size=(100, 1))
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(64, input_dim=20, activation='relu'))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(64, activation='relu'))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))
model.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
optimizer='rmsprop',
metrics=['accuracy'])
model.fit(x_train, y_train,
epochs=20,
batch_size=128)
score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, batch_size=128)
import numpy as np
import keras
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Dropout, Flatten
from keras.layers import Conv2D, MaxPooling2D
from keras.optimizers import SGD
# Generate dummy data
x_train = np.random.random((100, 100, 100, 3))
y_train = keras.utils.to_categorical(np.random.randint(10, size=(100, 1)), num_classes=10)
x_test = np.random.random((20, 100, 100, 3))
y_test = keras.utils.to_categorical(np.random.randint(10, size=(20, 1)), num_classes=10)
model = Sequential()
# input: 100x100 images with 3 channels -> (100, 100, 3) tensors.
# this applies 32 convolution filters of size 3x3 each.
model.add(Conv2D(32, (3, 3), activation='relu', input_shape=(100, 100, 3)))
model.add(Conv2D(32, (3, 3), activation='relu'))
model.add(MaxPooling2D(pool_size=(2, 2)))
model.add(Dropout(0.25))
model.add(Conv2D(64, (3, 3), activation='relu'))
model.add(Conv2D(64, (3, 3), activation='relu'))
model.add(MaxPooling2D(pool_size=(2, 2)))
model.add(Dropout(0.25))
model.add(Flatten())
model.add(Dense(256, activation='relu'))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(10, activation='softmax'))
sgd = SGD(lr=0.01, decay=1e-6, momentum=0.9, nesterov=True)
model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy', optimizer=sgd)
model.fit(x_train, y_train, batch_size=32, epochs=10)
score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, batch_size=32)
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Dropout
from keras.layers import Embedding
from keras.layers import LSTM
model = Sequential()
model.add(Embedding(max_features, output_dim=256))
model.add(LSTM(128))
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))
model.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
optimizer='rmsprop',
metrics=['accuracy'])
model.fit(x_train, y_train, batch_size=16, epochs=10)
score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, batch_size=16)
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import Dense, Dropout
from keras.layers import Embedding
from keras.layers import Conv1D, GlobalAveragePooling1D, MaxPooling1D
model = Sequential()
model.add(Conv1D(64, 3, activation='relu', input_shape=(seq_length, 100)))
model.add(Conv1D(64, 3, activation='relu'))
model.add(MaxPooling1D(3))
model.add(Conv1D(128, 3, activation='relu'))
model.add(Conv1D(128, 3, activation='relu'))
model.add(GlobalAveragePooling1D())
model.add(Dropout(0.5))
model.add(Dense(1, activation='sigmoid'))
model.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
optimizer='rmsprop',
metrics=['accuracy'])
model.fit(x_train, y_train, batch_size=16, epochs=10)
score = model.evaluate(x_test, y_test, batch_size=16)
In this model, we stack 3 LSTM layers on top of each other,
making the model capable of learning higher-level temporal representations.
The first two LSTMs return their full output sequences, but the last one only returns
the last step in its output sequence, thus dropping the temporal dimension
(i.e. converting the input sequence into a single vector).
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import LSTM, Dense
import numpy as np
data_dim = 16
timesteps = 8
num_classes = 10
# expected input data shape: (batch_size, timesteps, data_dim)
model = Sequential()
model.add(LSTM(32, return_sequences=True,
input_shape=(timesteps, data_dim))) # returns a sequence of vectors of dimension 32
model.add(LSTM(32, return_sequences=True)) # returns a sequence of vectors of dimension 32
model.add(LSTM(32)) # return a single vector of dimension 32
model.add(Dense(10, activation='softmax'))
model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy',
optimizer='rmsprop',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# Generate dummy training data
x_train = np.random.random((1000, timesteps, data_dim))
y_train = np.random.random((1000, num_classes))
# Generate dummy validation data
x_val = np.random.random((100, timesteps, data_dim))
y_val = np.random.random((100, num_classes))
model.fit(x_train, y_train,
batch_size=64, epochs=5,
validation_data=(x_val, y_val))
A stateful recurrent model is one for which the internal states (memories) obtained after processing a batch
of samples are reused as initial states for the samples of the next batch. This allows to process longer sequences
while keeping computational complexity manageable.
You can read more about stateful RNNs in the FAQ.
from keras.models import Sequential
from keras.layers import LSTM, Dense
import numpy as np
data_dim = 16
timesteps = 8
num_classes = 10
batch_size = 32
# Expected input batch shape: (batch_size, timesteps, data_dim)
# Note that we have to provide the full batch_input_shape since the network is stateful.
# the sample of index i in batch k is the follow-up for the sample i in batch k-1.
model = Sequential()
model.add(LSTM(32, return_sequences=True, stateful=True,
batch_input_shape=(batch_size, timesteps, data_dim)))
model.add(LSTM(32, return_sequences=True, stateful=True))
model.add(LSTM(32, stateful=True))
model.add(Dense(10, activation='softmax'))
model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy',
optimizer='rmsprop',
metrics=['accuracy'])
# Generate dummy training data
x_train = np.random.random((batch_size * 10, timesteps, data_dim))
y_train = np.random.random((batch_size * 10, num_classes))
# Generate dummy validation data
x_val = np.random.random((batch_size * 3, timesteps, data_dim))
y_val = np.random.random((batch_size * 3, num_classes))
model.fit(x_train, y_train,
batch_size=batch_size, epochs=5, shuffle=False,
validation_data=(x_val, y_val))