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Tools to calculate the Delta Variance for epistemic uncertainty estimation in PyTorch, using torch.func.

Project description

deltavar

https://arxiv.org/pdf/2502.14698

Installation

uv add deltavar

Overview

This library provides tools to calculate the Delta Variance, an approximation for the change in a model's prediction variance due to uncertainty in its parameters, often linked to epistemic uncertainty. It leverages torch.func for functional gradient computations.

Core Functionality (deltavar/core.py)

The main entry point for calculating the Delta Variance.

  • get_qoi_gradient(qoi_functional, params, model, z): Computes the gradient of a user-defined Quantity of Interest (QoI) functional with respect to the model parameters (params) for a specific input z.
  • calculate_delta_variance(qoi_gradient_pytree, sigma_strategy, sigma_options, ...): Calculates the Delta Variance ( \Delta Var = \nabla q^T \Sigma \nabla q ). It takes the QoI gradients and a strategy for defining the Sigma matrix (parameter covariance approximation).

Sigma Strategies (deltavar/sigma.py)

This module handles the definition and calculation of the Sigma matrix used in the Delta Variance computation.

Sigma Application: Functions to compute ( \nabla q^T \Sigma \nabla q ) for different Sigma structures:

  • apply_identity_sigma(flat_grads): Assumes ( \Sigma = I ). Returns ( ||\nabla q||^2 ).
  • apply_diagonal_sigma(flat_grads, diag_elements): Assumes ( \Sigma ) is diagonal.
  • apply_full_sigma(flat_grads, sigma_matrix): Uses a precomputed dense ( \Sigma ) matrix.

Sigma Calculation (using Empirical FIM): Functions to calculate the Empirical Fisher Information Matrix (FIM) and its inverse, which can serve as ( \Sigma ). These utilize torch.func.vmap for efficiency.

  • calculate_empirical_fim_diagonal(...): Computes the diagonal elements of the FIM: ( F_{ii} = E_D [ (\nabla_i \log p(D|\theta))^2 ] ).
  • calculate_inverse_fim_diagonal(..., damping): Computes ( \text{diag}( (F_{diag} + \lambda I)^{-1} ) ).
  • calculate_empirical_fim_full(...): Computes the full FIM: ( F = E_D [ \nabla \log p(D|\theta) \nabla \log p(D|\theta)^T ] ). Computationally demanding (O(P^2) memory).
  • calculate_inverse_fim_full(..., damping): Computes ( (F + \lambda I)^{-1} ). Computationally demanding (O(P^3) for inversion).

Sigma Specification in calculate_delta_variance: The sigma_strategy argument in calculate_delta_variance accepts:

  • 'identity': Uses apply_identity_sigma.
  • 'diagonal_empirical_fim': Calculates and uses the inverse diagonal FIM via calculate_inverse_fim_diagonal. Requires likelihood function, model, params, dataset.
  • 'inverse_full_empirical_fim': Calculates and uses the inverse full FIM via calculate_inverse_fim_full. Requires likelihood function, model, params, dataset.
  • torch.Tensor (1D): Interpreted as diagonal elements for apply_diagonal_sigma.
  • torch.Tensor (2D): Interpreted as the full matrix for apply_full_sigma.
  • Callable: A custom function f(flat_grads) -> scalar implementing the ( \nabla q^T \Sigma \nabla q ) calculation.

Testing (tests/)

Unit tests are provided to ensure the correctness of the core components.

  • test_core.py: Contains tests for get_qoi_gradient and calculate_delta_variance with various Sigma strategies.
  • test_sigma.py: Contains tests for Sigma application functions and FIM calculation routines.

Usage Example

Here's a basic example demonstrating how to calculate the Delta Variance, illustrating the steps involved in estimating epistemic uncertainty using this method.

import torch
import torch.nn as nn
from torch.utils.data import TensorDataset, DataLoader
from deltavar import get_qoi_gradient, calculate_delta_variance

# 1. Define Model, Functionals, and Data

# We start with a standard PyTorch model.
model = nn.Linear(10, 1)

# Define the Quantity of Interest (QoI). This is the specific scalar value
# derived from the model's output whose uncertainty we want to estimate.
# Here, it's simply the model's output for a specific input `z`.
# The functional must accept `params`, `model`, and the input `z`.
# It uses `torch.func.functional_call` to run the model statelessly.
def qoi_functional(params, model, z):
    return torch.func.functional_call(model, params, (z,))

# Define the Log Likelihood functional. This is only needed if you plan to
# calculate Sigma using the Fisher Information Matrix (FIM).
# It computes the log-likelihood of a single data point given the model parameters.
# Like the QoI, it uses `functional_call`.
def log_likelihood_functional(params, model, data_point):
    x, y = data_point
    prediction = torch.func.functional_call(model, params, (x,))
    # Example: Gaussian log-likelihood (proportional to negative MSE)
    neg_mse = -0.5 * torch.mean((prediction - y)**2)
    return neg_mse

# Prepare stateless parameters. `torch.func` requires model parameters
# as a separate argument (typically a dictionary or other PyTree).
# We detach and clone them from the stateful model.
params = {k: v.detach().clone() for k, v in model.named_parameters()}

# Define the specific input `z` for which we want the QoI's uncertainty.
z = torch.randn(1, 10)

# Prepare a dataset. This is needed only for FIM-based Sigma calculations.
# It should be representative of the data used to train the model.
# A DataLoader is convenient for batching during FIM calculation.
data_x = torch.randn(100, 10)
data_y = model(data_x).detach() + torch.randn(100, 1) * 0.1 # Simulate some data
dataset = TensorDataset(data_x, data_y)
data_loader = DataLoader(dataset, batch_size=32)

# 2. Calculate QoI Gradient (∇q)

# Compute the gradient of the QoI with respect to the model parameters.
# This gradient vector (∇q) measures how sensitive the QoI is to changes
# in each parameter. It's the first key component of the Delta Variance formula.
qoi_grads_tree = get_qoi_gradient(qoi_functional, params, model, z)
# The result matches the structure of `params` (e.g., dict: {'weight': ..., 'bias': ...})

# 3. Calculate Delta Variance (∇q^T Σ ∇q)

# Now, combine the QoI gradient (∇q) with a chosen Sigma matrix (Σ)
# to estimate the variance. Σ approximates the covariance of the parameters.

# Option A: Identity Sigma (Simplest Case)
# Assumes Σ = I. The Delta Variance becomes the squared L2 norm of the gradient.
# This is computationally cheap but ignores parameter correlations and scaling.
delta_var_identity = calculate_delta_variance(
    qoi_gradient_pytree=qoi_grads_tree,
    sigma_strategy='identity'
)
print(f"Delta Variance (Identity Sigma): {delta_var_identity.item():.4f}")

# Option B: Inverse Diagonal Empirical FIM Sigma (Common Approximation)
# Calculates Σ ≈ diag( (diag(FIM) + λI)^-1 ).
# The FIM captures the curvature of the log-likelihood, related to parameter uncertainty.
# Using its inverse diagonal is a common, efficient approximation for Σ.
# Requires the log-likelihood functional and the dataset used for training.
delta_var_diag_fim = calculate_delta_variance(
    qoi_gradient_pytree=qoi_grads_tree,
    sigma_strategy='diagonal_empirical_fim',
    sigma_options={'damping': 1e-5, 'vmap_batch_size': 64}, # Options for FIM calc
    log_likelihood_functional=log_likelihood_functional,
    params=params,
    model=model,
    dataset=data_loader, # Pass the dataset iterable
)
print(f"Delta Variance (Diagonal FIM Sigma): {delta_var_diag_fim.item():.4f}")

# Option C: Providing a Pre-calculated Sigma
# If you have a pre-computed Σ (e.g., from another method, or a specific
# structure you want to test), you can pass it directly as a tensor.
# 1D tensor: Assumes Σ is diagonal.
# 2D tensor: Assumes Σ is a full matrix.
num_params = sum(p.numel() for p in params.values())
my_diag_sigma = torch.ones(num_params) * 0.1 # Example: Simple diagonal Σ
delta_var_custom_diag = calculate_delta_variance(
    qoi_gradient_pytree=qoi_grads_tree,
    sigma_strategy=my_diag_sigma
)
print(f"Delta Variance (Custom Diagonal Sigma): {delta_var_custom_diag.item():.4f}")

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