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A python package to compute kernel-density-estimated likelihood

Project description

KDE-Likelihood

A python package to compute kernel-density-estimated likelihood.

Installation

To compile and use this package, you need python 3 and pip.

You can install this package by typing

pip install kdelikelihood

If you are using a platform or python version for which no precompiled binaries are available, you need a c++ compiler. On Linux, the compiler should not be a concern; on Windows, you need the Visual Studio 2019 compiler, which you may get by downlaoding and installing the Buildtools for Visual Studio.

To build this package from source, proceed as follows. If you have python and pip installed and available on the PATH, navigate to the project folder in which you find setup.py. Execute

pip install .

Usage example:

import numpy as np
from kdelikelihood import ParallelLikelihoodComputer, get_bandwidth_by_silverman, plot_smoothened


# Some model for simulating the data
def model(parameters, sampleSize=10000):
    result = np.zeros((sampleSize, 3))

    # Suppose the first column contains some count data
    result[:, 0] = np.random.poisson(parameters[0], size=sampleSize)

    # Suppose the second column contains some positive data
    result[:, 1] = np.random.randn(sampleSize) ** 2 * parameters[1] + result[:, 0]

    # Suppose the third column contains some unconstrained data
    result[:, 2] = np.random.randn(sampleSize) * result[:, 1] * parameters[2]

    return result


# The observed data (each row is an independent sample)
observedData = np.array(
    [
        [1.0, 1.11921911, -0.71177555],
        [6.0, 6.02855478, 8.37566854],
        [3.0, 9.57724975, 6.41826056],
        [5.0, 5.64429256, 6.24338937],
        [8.0, 9.57156202, 7.87944723],
        [4.0, 4.84531121, -0.65146309],
        [7.0, 7.03391557, -8.34715355],
        [3.0, 3.04287902, 0.92252008],
        [7.0, 7.00074299, 0.98825773],
        [5.0, 5.83488089, -6.66077578],
        [6.0, 6.26802035, -6.32007646],
        [4.0, 4.00099543, -5.72002288],
        [2.0, 2.61069588, 1.98710941],
        [7.0, 8.08870818, -11.84123493],
        [4.0, 4.20187965, 2.96009114],
        [2.0, 3.21568321, -0.51097464],
        [3.0, 9.08856868, 10.7647393],
        [5.0, 5.00020691, -4.58271643],
        [5.0, 11.4222031, 5.95202002],
        [5.0, 5.64400458, -4.22623137],
        [6.0, 7.08425759, -3.3731975],
        [4.0, 4.59795136, -4.37783711],
        [4.0, 7.20161146, -3.36315821],
        [3.0, 3.00051945, -2.39977869],
        [1.0, 3.05606476, -1.18190334],
        [2.0, 2.18191751, 2.29985054],
        [5.0, 5.11884191, -0.74355017],
        [5.0, 5.92561278, -8.76376851],
        [2.0, 4.19454749, 13.87107752],
        [5.0, 5.00930303, -0.34471651],
    ]
)

# The type of data we are considering in each column:
# 0: unconstrained real numbers
# 1: non-negative real numbers
# 2: natural numbers
modes = [2, 1, 0]

# The size of the sample we are generating for each parameter set
# to estimate the likelihood
sampleSize = 10000

# Bandwidths. Smaller values mean reduced bias if the sample is large enough.
# Bigger values mean reduced stochasticity of the result.
# As a start, we could use the rule of thumb of Silverman
bandwidths = get_bandwidth_by_silverman(observedData, sampleSize)

# Tolerance for the result
# This is not really a rigorous quantity. Bigger values make
# computations faster; smaller values increase the accuracy
atol = 1e-10

# To avoid the "curse of dimensionality", we can consider parts of the data
# as independent. However, since the data are interdependent in our example,
# we say they all belong to the same group. That is, we have one group only.
dataGroups = 1

# Note: if we considered a model returning many (>5) data columns, we might consider some
# of them independent of one another to reduce the stochasticity of the
# likelihood estimate. If the model parameters do not primarily control the dependency,
# then the parameter estimates will still converge to the correct values.

# Set up a likelihood computer based on the observed data
with ParallelLikelihoodComputer(observedData, bandwidths, modes, dataGroups, atol) as cmp:
    # Some parameters:
    # (here, this are the true parameters used to generate the data set, but
    #  in practice, we would not know of course)
    parameters = [5, 1, 1]

    # Get some data set from a simulation (each row is a "quasi-independent" sample)
    simulatedData = model(parameters, sampleSize)

    # Compute the likelihood
    logLikelihood = cmp.compute_log_likelihood(simulatedData)

    print("Ln(Likelihood):", logLikelihood)

    # To optimize this, we could use the suggested workflow implemented in the package,
    # which uses the package py-bobyqa (https://github.com/numericalalgorithmsgroup/pybobyqa/)
    from kdelikelihood import maximize_log_likelihood

    # Define the objective function
    def log_likelihood(parameters):
        # Generate a sample from the model
        sample = model(parameters, sampleSize)

        # Return the log-likelihood
        return cmp.compute_log_likelihood(sample)

    # Define some bounds for the parameters
    bounds = [(1e-10, 20), (0, 20), (0, 20)]

    # Maximize the likelihood
    result = maximize_log_likelihood(log_likelihood, bounds)

    # Print the result
    print(result)

    # For comparison, the likelihood estimated based on the true parameters:
    print("Likelihood of the original parameters:", log_likelihood(parameters))

    # Now we check the marginal distribution of the results and see 
    # if the heuristic bandwidth choice was appropriate 
    from matplotlib import pyplot as plt
    
    fig, axes = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 4), ncols=observedData.shape[1])
    axes[0].set_ylabel("Density")
    for i, axis in enumerate(axes):
        plot_smoothened(model(result.x, sampleSize)[:,i], bandwidth=bandwidths[i], label="Model", axis=axis)
        plot_smoothened(observedData[:,i], onlyHistogram=True, label="Data", axis=axis)
        axis.set_xlabel("Feature {}".format(i+1))
    
    axis.legend()
    plt.tight_layout()
    plt.show()
    
    # We see that the smoothed curve does not fit the histogram for the fitted
    # model very well. Hence, we decrease the bandwidths
    
    bandwidths[0] *= 0.5
    bandwidths[1] *= 0.05
    bandwidths[2] *= 0.2
    
    # Now we repeat the fitting procedure
    
    # Maximize the likelihood
    result = maximize_log_likelihood(log_likelihood, bounds)

    # Print the result
    print(result)

    # The resulting parameters are closer to the real ones 
    # and also the cueves overlap better. This would be
    # visible more strongly if we used a larger dataset 
    # as basis for our model fit.
    fig, axes = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 4), ncols=observedData.shape[1])
    axes[0].set_ylabel("Density")
    for i, axis in enumerate(axes):
        plot_smoothened(model(result.x, sampleSize)[:,i], bandwidth=bandwidths[i], label="Model", axis=axis)
        plot_smoothened(observedData[:,i], onlyHistogram=True, label="Data", axis=axis)
        axis.set_xlabel("Feature {}".format(i+1))
    
    axis.legend()
    plt.tight_layout()
    plt.show()
    

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