Data Preprocessing
From Ufldl
(→PCA/ZCA Whitening) |
(→Reconstruction Based Models) |
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In models based on reconstruction (including Autoencoders, Sparse Coding, RBMs, k-Means), it is often preferable to set <tt>epsilon</tt> to a value such that low-pass filtering is achieved. One way to check this is to set a value for <tt>epsilon</tt>, run ZCA whitening, and thereafter visualize the data before and after whitening. If the value of epsilon is set too low, the data will look very noisy; conversely, if <tt>epsilon</tt> is set too high, you will see a "blurred" version of the original data. A good way to get a feel for the magnitude of <tt>epsilon</tt> to try is to plot the eigenvalues on a graph. As visible in the example graph below, you may get a "long tail" corresponding to the high frequency noise components. You will want to choose <tt>epsilon</tt> such that most of the "long tail" is filtered out, i.e. choose <tt>epsilon</tt> such that it is greater than most of the small eigenvalues corresponding to the noise. | In models based on reconstruction (including Autoencoders, Sparse Coding, RBMs, k-Means), it is often preferable to set <tt>epsilon</tt> to a value such that low-pass filtering is achieved. One way to check this is to set a value for <tt>epsilon</tt>, run ZCA whitening, and thereafter visualize the data before and after whitening. If the value of epsilon is set too low, the data will look very noisy; conversely, if <tt>epsilon</tt> is set too high, you will see a "blurred" version of the original data. A good way to get a feel for the magnitude of <tt>epsilon</tt> to try is to plot the eigenvalues on a graph. As visible in the example graph below, you may get a "long tail" corresponding to the high frequency noise components. You will want to choose <tt>epsilon</tt> such that most of the "long tail" is filtered out, i.e. choose <tt>epsilon</tt> such that it is greater than most of the small eigenvalues corresponding to the noise. | ||
- | [[File: | + | [[File:ZCA_Eigenvalues_Plot.png]] |
In reconstruction based models, the loss function includes a term that penalizes reconstructions that are far from the original inputs. Then, if <tt>epsilon</tt> is set too ''low'', the data will contain a lot of noise which the model will need to reconstruct well. As a result, it is very important for reconstruction based models to have data that has been low-pass filtered. | In reconstruction based models, the loss function includes a term that penalizes reconstructions that are far from the original inputs. Then, if <tt>epsilon</tt> is set too ''low'', the data will contain a lot of noise which the model will need to reconstruct well. As a result, it is very important for reconstruction based models to have data that has been low-pass filtered. |