Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: target-permutation-importances
Version: 1.0.19
Summary: Compute (Target) Permutation Importances of a machine learning model
Home-page: https://github.com/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances
Author: Anthony Chiu
Author-email: kingychiu@gmail.com
Maintainer: Anthony Chiu
Maintainer-email: kingychiu@gmail.com
Requires-Python: >=3.8,<4.0
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
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Classifier: Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX
Classifier: Operating System :: Unix
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Artificial Intelligence
Requires-Dist: beartype (>=0.14.1,<0.15.0)
Requires-Dist: numpy (>=1.21.0,<2.0.0)
Requires-Dist: pandas (>=1.5.3,<2.0.0)
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Requires-Dist: tqdm (>=4.48.2,<5.0.0)
Project-URL: Documentation, https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
Project-URL: Repository, https://github.com/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# Target Permutation Importances (Null Importances)

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[[Source]](https://github.com/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances/)
[[Bug Report]](https://github.com/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances/issues/)
[[Documentation]](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/)
[[API Reference]](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/)

---

## Overview
Null Importances is normalized feature importance measures that can correct the feature importance bias.
The method is based on repeated permutations of the outcome
vector for estimating the distribution of measured importance
for each variable in a non-informative setting.

Overall, this package 

1. Fit the given model class $M$ times with different model's `random_state` to get $M$ actual feature importances of feature f: $A_f = [a_{f_1},a_{f_2}...a_{f_M}]$.
2. Fit the given model class with different model's `random_state` and **shuffled targets** for $N$ times to get $N$ feature random importances: $R_f = [r_{f_1},r_{f_2}...r_{f_N}]$.
3. Compute the final importances of a feature $f$ by various methods, such as:
    - $I_f = Avg(A_f) - Avg(R_f)$
    - $I_f = Avg(A_f) / (Avg(R_f) + 1)$
    - $I_f = Wasserstein Distance(A_f, R_f)$

We want $M \ge 1$ and $N \gg 1$. Having $M=1$ means the actual importances depends on only 1 model's `random_state` (Which is also fine).

Not to be confused with [sklearn.inspection.permutation_importance](https://scikit-learn.org/stable/modules/generated/sklearn.inspection.permutation_importance.html#sklearn.inspection.permutation_importance),
this sklearn method is about feature permutation instead of target permutation.

This method were originally proposed/implemented by:
- [[Paper] Permutation importance: a corrected feature importance measure](https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/26/10/1340/193348)
- [[Kaggle Notebook] Feature Selection with Null Importances
](https://www.kaggle.com/code/ogrellier/feature-selection-with-null-importances/notebook)

---

## Features
1. Compute null importances with only one function call.
2. Support models that provide information about feature importance (e.g. coef_, feature_importances_), such as `RandomForestClassifier`, `RandomForestRegressor`, `XGBClassifier`. `XGBRegressor`, `LGBMClassifier`, `LGBMRegressor`,`CatBoostClassifier`, `CatBoostRegressor`, `Lasso`, `LinearSVC`, etc.
1. Support `sklearn`'s `MultiOutputClassifier` or `MultiOutputRegressor` interface.
2. Support data in `pandas.DataFrame` and `numpy.ndarray`
3. Highly customizable with both the exposed `compute` and `generic_compute` functions. 
4. Proven effectiveness in Kaggle competitions and in [`Our Benchmarks Results`](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/benchmarks/).

---

## Benchmarks
Here are some examples of Top Kaggle solutions using this method:

| Year | Competition                                                                                                                  | Medal | Link                                                                                                                                        |
| ---- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 2023 | [Predict Student Performance from Game Play](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/predict-student-performance-from-game-play) | Gold  | [3rd place solution](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/predict-student-performance-from-game-play/discussion/420235)                      |
| 2019 | [Elo Merchant Category Recommendation](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/elo-merchant-category-recommendation/overview)    | Gold  | [16th place solution]([-play/discussion/420235](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/elo-merchant-category-recommendation/discussion/82166)) |
| 2018 | [Home Credit Default Risk](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/home-credit-default-risk/overview)                            | Gold  | [10th place solution](https://www.kaggle.com/competitions/home-credit-default-risk/discussion/64598)                                        |

Below show the benchmark results of running null-importances with feature selection on multiple models and datasets. "better" means it is better than running feature selection with the model's built-in feature importances. Details can be seen [`here`](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/benchmarks/).


| model                  | n_dataset | n_better | better % |
| ---------------------- | --------- | -------- | -------- |
| RandomForestClassifier | 10        | 10       | 100.0    |
| RandomForestRegressor  | 12        | 8        | 66.67    |
| XGBClassifier          | 10        | 7        | 70.0     |
| XGBRegressor           | 12        | 7        | 58.33    |
| LGBMClassifier         | 10        | 8        | 80.0     |
| LGBMRegressor          | 12        | 8        | 66.67    |
| CatBoostClassifier     | 10        | 6        | 60.0     |
| CatBoostRegressor      | 12        | 8        | 66.67    |
---

## Installation

```
pip install target-permutation-importances
```
or with poetry:
```
poetry add target-permutation-importances
```

Although this package is tested on models from `sklearn`, `xgboost`, `catboost`, `lightgbm`, they are not
a hard requirement for the installation, you can use this package for any model if it implements the `sklearn` interface.
For models that don't follow `sklearn` interface, you can use the exposed `generic_compute` method as discussed in the 
Advance Usage / Customization section.

Dependencies:
```
[tool.poetry.dependencies]
python = "^3.8"
numpy = "^1.21.0"
pandas = "^1.5.3"
tqdm = "^4.48.2"
beartype = "^0.14.1"
```
---

## Get Started (Functional APIs)

### Tree Models with `feature_importances_` Attribute

```python
# import the package
import target_permutation_importances as tpi

# Prepare a dataset
import pandas as pd
from sklearn.datasets import load_breast_cancer

# Models
from sklearn.ensemble import RandomForestClassifier

data = load_breast_cancer()

# Convert to a pandas dataframe
Xpd = pd.DataFrame(data.data, columns=data.feature_names)

# Compute permutation importances with default settings
result_df = tpi.compute(
    model_cls=RandomForestClassifier, # The constructor/class of the model.
    model_cls_params={ # The parameters to pass to the model constructor. Update this based on your needs.
        "n_jobs": -1,
    },
    model_fit_params={}, # The parameters to pass to the model fit method. Update this based on your needs.
    X=Xpd, # pd.DataFrame, np.ndarray
    y=data.target, # pd.Series, np.ndarray
    num_actual_runs=2,
    num_random_runs=10,
    # Options: {compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction, compute_permutation_importance_by_division}
    # Or use your own function to calculate.
    permutation_importance_calculator=tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction,
)

print(result_df[["feature", "importance"]].sort_values("importance", ascending=False).head())
```
Fork above code from [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances-basic-usage/notebook).

Outputs:
```
Running 2 actual runs and 10 random runs
100%|██████████| 2/2 [00:01<00:00,  1.62it/s]
100%|██████████| 10/10 [00:06<00:00,  1.46it/s]
                 feature  importance
25       worst perimeter    0.117495
22  worst concave points    0.089949
26          worst radius    0.084632
7    mean concave points    0.064289
20            worst area    0.062485
8         mean concavity    0.047122
10        mean perimeter    0.029270
5              mean area    0.014566
11           mean radius    0.014346
0             area error    0.000693

```


### Linear Models with `coef_` Attribute

```python
# import the package
import target_permutation_importances as tpi

# Prepare a dataset
import pandas as pd
from sklearn.datasets import load_breast_cancer

# Models
from sklearn.svm import LinearSVC

data = load_breast_cancer()

# Convert to a pandas dataframe
Xpd = pd.DataFrame(data.data, columns=data.feature_names)

# Compute permutation importances with default settings
result_df = tpi.compute(
    model_cls=LinearSVC, # The constructor/class of the model.
    model_cls_params={"max_iter": 1000}, # The parameters to pass to the model constructor. Update this based on your needs.
    model_fit_params={}, # The parameters to pass to the model fit method. Update this based on your needs.
    X=Xpd, # pd.DataFrame, np.ndarray
    y=data.target, # pd.Series, np.ndarray
    num_actual_runs=1,
    num_random_runs=10,
    # Options: {compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction, compute_permutation_importance_by_division}
    # Or use your own function to calculate.
    permutation_importance_calculator=tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction,
)

print(result_df[["feature", "importance"]].sort_values("importance", ascending=False).head(10))
```
Fork above code from [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances-basic-usage/notebook).

Outputs:
```
              feature  importance
10     mean perimeter    0.067352
29      worst texture    0.029602
11        mean radius    0.029509
26       worst radius    0.026499
21  worst compactness    0.010139
23    worst concavity    0.009149
25    worst perimeter    0.008779
14       mean texture    0.007845
0          area error    0.007540
20         worst area    0.004508
```

### With `sklearn.multioutput`

```python
# import the package
import target_permutation_importances as tpi

# Prepare a dataset
import pandas as pd
from sklearn.datasets import make_regression

# Models
from sklearn.ensemble import RandomForestRegressor
from sklearn.multioutput import MultiOutputClassifier, MultiOutputRegressor

# Multi target regression
X, y = make_regression(
    n_samples=100,
    n_features=20,
    n_targets=5,
)

# Compute permutation importances with default settings
result_df = tpi.compute(
    model_cls=MultiOutputRegressor,
    model_cls_params={ # The constructor/class of MultiOutputRegressor
        "estimator": RandomForestRegressor(n_estimators=2),
    },
    model_fit_params={}, # The parameters to pass to the model fit method. Update this based on your needs.
    X=X, # pd.DataFrame, np.ndarray
    y=y, # pd.Series, np.ndarray
    num_actual_runs=2,
    num_random_runs=10,
    # Options: {compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction, compute_permutation_importance_by_division}
    # Or use your own function to calculate.
    permutation_importance_calculator=tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction,
)

print(result_df[["feature", "importance"]].sort_values("importance", ascending=False).head())
```
Fork above code from [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances-basic-usage/notebook).

Outputs:
```
Running 2 actual runs and 10 random runs
100%|██████████| 2/2 [00:00<00:00,  4.97it/s]
100%|██████████| 10/10 [00:01<00:00,  5.10it/s]
    feature  importance
19       19    0.233211
10       10    0.058238
0         0    0.049782
17       17    0.031321
2         2    0.028209
```

You can find more detailed examples in the "Feature Selection Examples" section.


### Customization

#### Changing model or parameters

You can pick your own model by changing
`model_cls`, `model_cls_params` and `model_fit_params`, for example, using with `LGBMClassifier` 
with a `importance_type=gain` and `colsample_bytree=0.5`:

```python
result_df = tpi.compute(
    model_cls=LGBMClassifier, # The constructor/class of the model.
    model_cls_params={ # The parameters to pass to the model constructor. Update this based on your needs.
        "n_jobs": -1,
        "importance_type": "gain",
        "colsample_bytree": 0.5,
    },
    model_fit_params={}, # The parameters to pass to the model fit method. Update this based on your needs.
    X=Xpd, # pd.DataFrame, np.ndarray
    y=data.target, # pd.Series, np.ndarray
    num_actual_runs=2,
    num_random_runs=10,
    # Options: {compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction, compute_permutation_importance_by_division}
    # Or use your own function to calculate.
    permutation_importance_calculator=tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction,
)
```

Note: Tree models are greedy. Usually it is a good idea to introduce some randomness into the tree model by setting `colsample_*` params.
It forces the model to explore the importances of different features. In other words, setting these
parameters avoid a feature from being under-representative in the importance calculation because of having another highly correlated feature.

#### Changing null importances calculation

You can pick your own calculation method by changing `permutation_importance_calculator`.
There are 3 provided calculations:

- `tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction`
- `tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_division`
- `tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_wasserstein_distance`

You can also implement you own calculation function and pass it in. The function needs to follow 
`PermutationImportanceCalculatorType` specification, you can find it in
[API Reference](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/)

#### Advance Customization

This package exposes `tpi.generic_compute` to allow advance customization.
Read the followings for details:

- [generic_compute API reference](https://target-permutation-importances.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/#target_permutation_importances.functional.generic_compute)
- [`target_permutation_importances.functional.py`](https://github.com/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances/blob/main/target_permutation_importances/functional.py).

---

## Get Started (scikit-learn APIs)


`TargetPermutationImportancesWrapper` follows scikit-learn interfaces and support scikit-learn feature selection method such as `SelectFromModel`:

```python
# Import the package
import target_permutation_importances as tpi

# Prepare a dataset
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
from sklearn.datasets import load_breast_cancer

# Models
from sklearn.feature_selection import SelectFromModel
from sklearn.ensemble import RandomForestClassifier

data = load_breast_cancer()

# Convert to a pandas dataframe
Xpd = pd.DataFrame(data.data, columns=data.feature_names)

# Compute permutation importances with default settings
wrapped_model = tpi.TargetPermutationImportancesWrapper(
    model_cls=RandomForestClassifier, # The constructor/class of the model.
    model_cls_params={ # The parameters to pass to the model constructor. Update this based on your needs.
        "n_jobs": -1,
    },
    num_actual_runs=2,
    num_random_runs=10,
    # Options: {compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction, compute_permutation_importance_by_division}
    # Or use your own function to calculate.
    permutation_importance_calculator=tpi.compute_permutation_importance_by_subtraction,
)
wrapped_model.fit(
    X=Xpd, # pd.DataFrame, np.ndarray
    y=data.target, # pd.Series, np.ndarray
    # And other fit parameters for the model.
)
# Get the feature importances as a pandas dataframe
result_df = wrapped_model.feature_importances_df
print(result_df[["feature", "importance"]].sort_values("importance", ascending=False).head())


# Select top-5 features with sklearn `SelectFromModel`
selector = SelectFromModel(
    estimator=wrapped_model, prefit=True, max_features=5, threshold=-np.inf
).fit(Xpd, data.target)
selected_x = selector.transform(Xpd)
print(selected_x.shape)
print(selector.get_feature_names_out())
```
Fork above code from [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/target-permutation-importances-basic-usage/notebook).

Outputs:
```
Running 2 actual runs and 10 random runs
100%|██████████| 2/2 [00:01<00:00,  1.80it/s]
100%|██████████| 10/10 [00:06<00:00,  1.55it/s]
                 feature  importance
22       worst perimeter    0.151953
27  worst concave points    0.124407
20          worst radius    0.119090
7    mean concave points    0.098747
23            worst area    0.096943
(569, 5)
['mean concave points' 'worst radius' 'worst perimeter' 'worst area'
 'worst concave points']
 ```

---

## Feature Selection Examples
- [Feature Selection for Binary Classification with RandomForestClassifier](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/feature-selection-for-binary-classification-task)
- [Feature Selection for Binary Classification with XGBClassifier](https://www.kaggle.com/code/kingychiu/feature-selection-for-binary-classification-xgb/notebook)

---


## Development Setup and Contribution Guide
**Python Version**

You can find the suggested development Python version in `.python-version`.
You might consider setting up `Pyenv` if you want to have multiple Python versions on your machine.

**Python packages**

This repository is setup with `Poetry`. If you are not familiar with Poetry, you can find package requirements listed in `pyproject.toml`. 
Otherwise, you can just set it up with `poetry install`

**Run Benchmarks**

To run the benchmark locally on your machine, run `make run_tabular_benchmark` or `python -m benchmarks.run_tabular_benchmark`

**Make Changes**

Following the [Make Changes Guide from Github](https://github.com/github/docs/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md#make-changes)
Before committing or merging, please run the linters defined in `make lint` and the tests defined in `make test`

---


