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A system for automating the design of predictive modeling pipelines tailored for clinical prognosis.

Project description

AutoPrognosis - A system for automating the design of predictive modeling pipelines tailored for clinical prognosis.

Test In Colab Test In Colab Tests Tests R Tutorials

arXiv License about

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:key: Features

  • :rocket:Automatically learns ensembles of pipelines for classification, regression or survival analysis tasks.
  • :cyclone: Easy to extend pluginable architecture.
  • :fire: Interpretability and uncertainty quantification tools.
  • :adhesive_bandage: Data imputation using HyperImpute.
  • :zap: Build demonstrators using Streamlit.
  • :notebook: Python and R tutorials available.

:rocket:Installation

Using pip

The library can be installed from PyPI using

$ pip install autoprognosis

or from source, using

$ pip install .

Redis (Optional, but recommended)

AutoPrognosis can use Redis as a backend to improve the performance and quality of the searches.

For that, install the redis-server package following the steps described on the official site.

:boom: Sample Usage

Advanced Python tutorials can be found in the Python tutorials section.

R examples can be found in the R tutorials section.

List the available classifiers

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.classifiers import Classifiers
print(Classifiers().list_available())

Create a study for classifiers

from pathlib import Path

from sklearn.datasets import load_breast_cancer

from autoprognosis.studies.classifiers import ClassifierStudy
from autoprognosis.utils.serialization import load_model_from_file
from autoprognosis.utils.tester import evaluate_estimator


X, Y = load_breast_cancer(return_X_y=True, as_frame=True)

df = X.copy()
df["target"] = Y

workspace = Path("workspace")
study_name = "example"

study = ClassifierStudy(
    study_name=study_name,
    dataset=df,  # pandas DataFrame
    target="target",  # the label column in the dataset
    num_iter=100,  # how many trials to do for each candidate
    timeout=60,  # seconds
    classifiers=["logistic_regression", "lda", "qda"],
    workspace=workspace,
)

study.run()

output = workspace / study_name / "model.p"
model = load_model_from_file(output)

# <model> contains the optimal architecture, but the model is not trained yet. You need to call fit() to use it.
# This way, we can further benchmark the selected model on the training set.
metrics = evaluate_estimator(model, X, Y)

print(f"model {model.name()} -> {metrics['clf']}")

# Train the model
model.fit(X, Y)

# Predict the probabilities of each class using the model
model.predict_proba(X)

List the available regressors

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.regression import Regression
print(Regression().list_available())

Regression study

# stdlib
from pathlib import Path

# third party
import pandas as pd

# autoprognosis absolute
from autoprognosis.utils.serialization import load_model_from_file
from autoprognosis.utils.tester import evaluate_regression
from autoprognosis.studies.regression import RegressionStudy

# Load dataset
df = pd.read_csv(
    "https://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/machine-learning-databases/00291/airfoil_self_noise.dat",
    header=None,
    sep="\\t",
)
last_col = df.columns[-1]
y = df[last_col]
X = df.drop(columns=[last_col])

df = X.copy()
df["target"] = y

# Search the model
workspace = Path("workspace")
workspace.mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)

study_name="regression_example"
study = RegressionStudy(
    study_name=study_name,
    dataset=df,  # pandas DataFrame
    target="target",  # the label column in the dataset
    num_iter=10,  # how many trials to do for each candidate. Default: 50
    num_study_iter=2,  # how many outer iterations to do. Default: 5
    timeout=50,  # timeout for optimization for each classfier. Default: 600 seconds
    regressors=["linear_regression", "xgboost_regressor"],
    workspace=workspace,
)

study.run()

# Test the model
output = workspace / study_name / "model.p"

model = load_model_from_file(output)
# <model> contains the optimal architecture, but the model is not trained yet. You need to call fit() to use it.
# This way, we can further benchmark the selected model on the training set.

metrics = evaluate_regression(model, X, y)

print(f"Model {model.name()} score: {metrics['str']}")

# Train the model
model.fit(X, y)


# Predict using the model
model.predict(X)

List available survival analysis estimators

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.risk_estimation import RiskEstimation
print(RiskEstimation().list_available())

Survival analysis study

# stdlib
import os
from pathlib import Path

# third party
import numpy as np
from pycox import datasets

# autoprognosis absolute
from autoprognosis.studies.risk_estimation import RiskEstimationStudy
from autoprognosis.utils.serialization import load_model_from_file
from autoprognosis.utils.tester import evaluate_survival_estimator

df = datasets.gbsg.read_df()
df = df[df["duration"] > 0]

X = df.drop(columns = ["duration"])
T = df["duration"]
Y = df["event"]

eval_time_horizons = np.linspace(T.min(), T.max(), 5)[1:-1]

workspace = Path("workspace")
study_name = "example_risks"

study = RiskEstimationStudy(
    study_name=study_name,
    dataset=df,
    target="event",
    time_to_event="duration",
    time_horizons=eval_time_horizons,
    num_iter=10,
    num_study_iter=1,
    timeout=10,
    risk_estimators=["cox_ph", "survival_xgboost"],
    score_threshold=0.5,
    workspace=workspace,
)

study.run()

output = workspace / study_name / "model.p"

model = load_model_from_file(output)
# <model> contains the optimal architecture, but the model is not trained yet. You need to call fit() to use it.
# This way, we can further benchmark the selected model on the training set.

metrics = evaluate_survival_estimator(model, X, T, Y, eval_time_horizons)

print(f"Model {model.name()} score: {metrics['clf']}")

# Train the model
model.fit(X, T, Y)

# Predict using the model
model.predict(X, eval_time_horizons)

:high_brightness: Tutorials

Plugins

AutoML

Building a demonstrator

:zap: Plugins

Imputation methods

from autoprognosis.plugins.imputers import  Imputers

imputer = Imputers().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
hyperimpute Iterative imputer using both regression and classification methods based on linear models, trees, XGBoost, CatBoost and neural nets
mean Replace the missing values using the mean along each column with SimpleImputer
median Replace the missing values using the median along each column with SimpleImputer
most_frequent Replace the missing values using the most frequent value along each column with SimpleImputer
missforest Iterative imputation method based on Random Forests using IterativeImputer and ExtraTreesRegressor
ice Iterative imputation method based on regularized linear regression using IterativeImputer and BayesianRidge
mice Multiple imputations based on ICE using IterativeImputer and BayesianRidge
softimpute Low-rank matrix approximation via nuclear-norm regularization
EM Iterative procedure which uses other variables to impute a value (Expectation), then checks whether that is the value most likely (Maximization) - EM imputation algorithm
gain GAIN: Missing Data Imputation using Generative Adversarial Nets

Preprocessing methods

from autoprognosis.plugins.preprocessors import Preprocessors

preprocessor = Preprocessors().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
maxabs_scaler Scale each feature by its maximum absolute value. MaxAbsScaler
scaler Standardize features by removing the mean and scaling to unit variance. - StandardScaler
feature_normalizer Normalize samples individually to unit norm. Normalizer
normal_transform Transform features using quantiles information.QuantileTransformer
uniform_transform Transform features using quantiles information.QuantileTransformer
minmax_scaler Transform features by scaling each feature to a given range.MinMaxScaler

Classification

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.classifiers import Classifiers

classifier = Classifiers().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
neural_nets PyTorch based neural net classifier.
logistic_regression LogisticRegression
catboost Gradient boosting on decision trees - CatBoost
random_forest A random forest classifier. RandomForestClassifier
tabnet TabNet : Attentive Interpretable Tabular Learning
xgboost XGBoostClassifier

Survival Analysis

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.risk_estimation import RiskEstimation

predictor = RiskEstimation().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
survival_xgboost XGBoost Survival Embeddings
loglogistic_aft Log-Logistic AFT model
deephit DeepHit: A Deep Learning Approach to Survival Analysis with Competing Risks
cox_ph Cox’s proportional hazard model
weibull_aft Weibull AFT model.
lognormal_aft Log-Normal AFT model
coxnet CoxNet is a Cox proportional hazards model also referred to as DeepSurv

Regression

from autoprognosis.plugins.prediction.regression import Regression

regressor = Regression().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
tabnet_regressor TabNet : Attentive Interpretable Tabular Learning
catboost_regressor Gradient boosting on decision trees - CatBoost
random_forest_regressor RandomForestRegressor
xgboost_regressor XGBoostClassifier
neural_nets_regression PyTorch-based neural net regressor.
linear_regression LinearRegression

Explainers

from autoprognosis.plugins.explainers import Explainers

explainer = Explainers().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
risk_effect_size Feature importance using Cohen's distance between probabilities
lime Lime: Explaining the predictions of any machine learning classifier
symbolic_pursuit [Symbolic Pursuit](Learning outside the black-box: at the pursuit of interpretable models)
shap_permutation_sampler SHAP Permutation Sampler
kernel_shap SHAP KernelExplainer
invase INVASE: Instance-wise Variable Selection

Uncertainty

from autoprognosis.plugins.uncertainty import UncertaintyQuantification
model = UncertaintyQuantification().get(<NAME>)
Name Description
cohort_explainer
conformal_prediction
jackknife

:hammer: Test

After installing the library, the tests can be executed using pytest

$ pip install .[testing]
$ pytest -vxs -m "not slow"

Citing

If you use this code, please cite the associated paper:

@misc{https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2210.12090,
  doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2210.12090},
  url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.12090},
  author = {Imrie, Fergus and Cebere, Bogdan and McKinney, Eoin F. and van der Schaar, Mihaela},
  keywords = {Machine Learning (cs.LG), Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI), FOS: Computer and information sciences, FOS: Computer and information sciences},
  title = {AutoPrognosis 2.0: Democratizing Diagnostic and Prognostic Modeling in Healthcare with Automated Machine Learning},
  publisher = {arXiv},
  year = {2022},
  copyright = {Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International}
}

References

  1. AutoPrognosis: Automated Clinical Prognostic Modeling via Bayesian Optimization with Structured Kernel Learning
  2. Prognostication and Risk Factors for Cystic Fibrosis via Automated Machine Learning
  3. Cardiovascular Disease Risk Prediction using Automated Machine Learning: A Prospective Study of 423,604 UK Biobank Participants

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