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predict.xgb.Booster

Predict method for eXtreme Gradient Boosting model


Description

Predicted values based on either xgboost model or model handle object.

Usage

## S3 method for class 'xgb.Booster'
predict(
  object,
  newdata,
  missing = NA,
  outputmargin = FALSE,
  ntreelimit = NULL,
  predleaf = FALSE,
  predcontrib = FALSE,
  approxcontrib = FALSE,
  predinteraction = FALSE,
  reshape = FALSE,
  training = FALSE,
  ...
)

## S3 method for class 'xgb.Booster.handle'
predict(object, ...)

Arguments

object

Object of class xgb.Booster or xgb.Booster.handle

newdata

takes matrix, dgCMatrix, local data file or xgb.DMatrix.

missing

Missing is only used when input is dense matrix. Pick a float value that represents missing values in data (e.g., sometimes 0 or some other extreme value is used).

outputmargin

whether the prediction should be returned in the for of original untransformed sum of predictions from boosting iterations' results. E.g., setting outputmargin=TRUE for logistic regression would result in predictions for log-odds instead of probabilities.

ntreelimit

limit the number of model's trees or boosting iterations used in prediction (see Details). It will use all the trees by default (NULL value).

predleaf

whether predict leaf index.

predcontrib

whether to return feature contributions to individual predictions (see Details).

approxcontrib

whether to use a fast approximation for feature contributions (see Details).

predinteraction

whether to return contributions of feature interactions to individual predictions (see Details).

reshape

whether to reshape the vector of predictions to a matrix form when there are several prediction outputs per case. This option has no effect when either of predleaf, predcontrib, or predinteraction flags is TRUE.

training

whether is the prediction result used for training. For dart booster, training predicting will perform dropout.

...

Parameters passed to predict.xgb.Booster

Details

Note that ntreelimit is not necessarily equal to the number of boosting iterations and it is not necessarily equal to the number of trees in a model. E.g., in a random forest-like model, ntreelimit would limit the number of trees. But for multiclass classification, while there are multiple trees per iteration, ntreelimit limits the number of boosting iterations.

Also note that ntreelimit would currently do nothing for predictions from gblinear, since gblinear doesn't keep its boosting history.

One possible practical applications of the predleaf option is to use the model as a generator of new features which capture non-linearity and interactions, e.g., as implemented in xgb.create.features.

Setting predcontrib = TRUE allows to calculate contributions of each feature to individual predictions. For "gblinear" booster, feature contributions are simply linear terms (feature_beta * feature_value). For "gbtree" booster, feature contributions are SHAP values (Lundberg 2017) that sum to the difference between the expected output of the model and the current prediction (where the hessian weights are used to compute the expectations). Setting approxcontrib = TRUE approximates these values following the idea explained in http://blog.datadive.net/interpreting-random-forests/.

With predinteraction = TRUE, SHAP values of contributions of interaction of each pair of features are computed. Note that this operation might be rather expensive in terms of compute and memory. Since it quadratically depends on the number of features, it is recommended to perform selection of the most important features first. See below about the format of the returned results.

Value

For regression or binary classification, it returns a vector of length nrows(newdata). For multiclass classification, either a num_class * nrows(newdata) vector or a (nrows(newdata), num_class) dimension matrix is returned, depending on the reshape value.

When predleaf = TRUE, the output is a matrix object with the number of columns corresponding to the number of trees.

When predcontrib = TRUE and it is not a multiclass setting, the output is a matrix object with num_features + 1 columns. The last "+ 1" column in a matrix corresponds to bias. For a multiclass case, a list of num_class elements is returned, where each element is such a matrix. The contribution values are on the scale of untransformed margin (e.g., for binary classification would mean that the contributions are log-odds deviations from bias).

When predinteraction = TRUE and it is not a multiclass setting, the output is a 3d array with dimensions c(nrow, num_features + 1, num_features + 1). The off-diagonal (in the last two dimensions) elements represent different features interaction contributions. The array is symmetric WRT the last two dimensions. The "+ 1" columns corresponds to bias. Summing this array along the last dimension should produce practically the same result as predict with predcontrib = TRUE. For a multiclass case, a list of num_class elements is returned, where each element is such an array.

References

Scott M. Lundberg, Su-In Lee, "A Unified Approach to Interpreting Model Predictions", NIPS Proceedings 2017, https://arxiv.org/abs/1705.07874

Scott M. Lundberg, Su-In Lee, "Consistent feature attribution for tree ensembles", https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.06060

See Also

Examples

## binary classification:

data(agaricus.train, package='xgboost')
data(agaricus.test, package='xgboost')
train <- agaricus.train
test <- agaricus.test

bst <- xgboost(data = train$data, label = train$label, max_depth = 2,
               eta = 0.5, nthread = 2, nrounds = 5, objective = "binary:logistic")
# use all trees by default
pred <- predict(bst, test$data)
# use only the 1st tree
pred1 <- predict(bst, test$data, ntreelimit = 1)

# Predicting tree leafs:
# the result is an nsamples X ntrees matrix
pred_leaf <- predict(bst, test$data, predleaf = TRUE)
str(pred_leaf)

# Predicting feature contributions to predictions:
# the result is an nsamples X (nfeatures + 1) matrix
pred_contr <- predict(bst, test$data, predcontrib = TRUE)
str(pred_contr)
# verify that contributions' sums are equal to log-odds of predictions (up to float precision):
summary(rowSums(pred_contr) - qlogis(pred))
# for the 1st record, let's inspect its features that had non-zero contribution to prediction:
contr1 <- pred_contr[1,]
contr1 <- contr1[-length(contr1)]    # drop BIAS
contr1 <- contr1[contr1 != 0]        # drop non-contributing features
contr1 <- contr1[order(abs(contr1))] # order by contribution magnitude
old_mar <- par("mar")
par(mar = old_mar + c(0,7,0,0))
barplot(contr1, horiz = TRUE, las = 2, xlab = "contribution to prediction in log-odds")
par(mar = old_mar)


## multiclass classification in iris dataset:

lb <- as.numeric(iris$Species) - 1
num_class <- 3
set.seed(11)
bst <- xgboost(data = as.matrix(iris[, -5]), label = lb,
               max_depth = 4, eta = 0.5, nthread = 2, nrounds = 10, subsample = 0.5,
               objective = "multi:softprob", num_class = num_class)
# predict for softmax returns num_class probability numbers per case:
pred <- predict(bst, as.matrix(iris[, -5]))
str(pred)
# reshape it to a num_class-columns matrix
pred <- matrix(pred, ncol=num_class, byrow=TRUE)
# convert the probabilities to softmax labels
pred_labels <- max.col(pred) - 1
# the following should result in the same error as seen in the last iteration
sum(pred_labels != lb)/length(lb)

# compare that to the predictions from softmax:
set.seed(11)
bst <- xgboost(data = as.matrix(iris[, -5]), label = lb,
               max_depth = 4, eta = 0.5, nthread = 2, nrounds = 10, subsample = 0.5,
               objective = "multi:softmax", num_class = num_class)
pred <- predict(bst, as.matrix(iris[, -5]))
str(pred)
all.equal(pred, pred_labels)
# prediction from using only 5 iterations should result
# in the same error as seen in iteration 5:
pred5 <- predict(bst, as.matrix(iris[, -5]), ntreelimit=5)
sum(pred5 != lb)/length(lb)


## random forest-like model of 25 trees for binary classification:

set.seed(11)
bst <- xgboost(data = train$data, label = train$label, max_depth = 5,
               nthread = 2, nrounds = 1, objective = "binary:logistic",
               num_parallel_tree = 25, subsample = 0.6, colsample_bytree = 0.1)
# Inspect the prediction error vs number of trees:
lb <- test$label
dtest <- xgb.DMatrix(test$data, label=lb)
err <- sapply(1:25, function(n) {
  pred <- predict(bst, dtest, ntreelimit=n)
  sum((pred > 0.5) != lb)/length(lb)
})
plot(err, type='l', ylim=c(0,0.1), xlab='#trees')

xgboost

Extreme Gradient Boosting

v1.4.1.1
Apache License (== 2.0) | file LICENSE
Authors
Tianqi Chen [aut], Tong He [aut, cre], Michael Benesty [aut], Vadim Khotilovich [aut], Yuan Tang [aut] (<https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5243-233X>), Hyunsu Cho [aut], Kailong Chen [aut], Rory Mitchell [aut], Ignacio Cano [aut], Tianyi Zhou [aut], Mu Li [aut], Junyuan Xie [aut], Min Lin [aut], Yifeng Geng [aut], Yutian Li [aut], XGBoost contributors [cph] (base XGBoost implementation)
Initial release
2021-04-22

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