Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), a topic model designed for text documents.
ml_lda(
x,
formula = NULL,
k = 10,
max_iter = 20,
doc_concentration = NULL,
topic_concentration = NULL,
subsampling_rate = 0.05,
optimizer = "online",
checkpoint_interval = 10,
keep_last_checkpoint = TRUE,
learning_decay = 0.51,
learning_offset = 1024,
optimize_doc_concentration = TRUE,
seed = NULL,
features_col = "features",
topic_distribution_col = "topicDistribution",
uid = random_string("lda_"),
...
)ml_describe_topics(model, max_terms_per_topic = 10)
ml_log_likelihood(model, dataset)
ml_log_perplexity(model, dataset)
ml_topics_matrix(model)
ml_describe_topics
returns a DataFrame with topics and their top-weighted terms.
ml_log_likelihood
calculates a lower bound on the log likelihood of
the entire corpus
A spark_connection
, ml_pipeline
, or a tbl_spark
.
Used when x
is a tbl_spark
. R formula as a character string or a formula. This is used to transform the input dataframe before fitting, see ft_r_formula for details.
The number of clusters to create
The maximum number of iterations to use.
Concentration parameter (commonly named "alpha") for the prior placed on documents' distributions over topics ("theta"). See details.
Concentration parameter (commonly named "beta" or "eta") for the prior placed on topics' distributions over terms.
(For Online optimizer only) Fraction of the corpus
to be sampled and used in each iteration of mini-batch gradient descent, in
range (0, 1]. Note that this should be adjusted in synch with max_iter
so the entire corpus is used. Specifically, set both so that maxIterations *
miniBatchFraction greater than or equal to 1.
Optimizer or inference algorithm used to estimate the LDA model. Supported: "online" for Online Variational Bayes (default) and "em" for Expectation-Maximization.
Set checkpoint interval (>= 1) or disable checkpoint (-1). E.g. 10 means that the cache will get checkpointed every 10 iterations, defaults to 10.
(Spark 2.0.0+) (For EM optimizer only) If using
checkpointing, this indicates whether to keep the last checkpoint.
If FALSE
, then the checkpoint will be deleted. Deleting the checkpoint
can cause failures if a data partition is lost, so set this bit with care.
Note that checkpoints will be cleaned up via reference counting, regardless.
(For Online optimizer only) Learning rate, set as an exponential decay rate. This should be between (0.5, 1.0] to guarantee asymptotic convergence. This is called "kappa" in the Online LDA paper (Hoffman et al., 2010). Default: 0.51, based on Hoffman et al.
(For Online optimizer only) A (positive) learning parameter that downweights early iterations. Larger values make early iterations count less. This is called "tau0" in the Online LDA paper (Hoffman et al., 2010) Default: 1024, following Hoffman et al.
(For Online optimizer only) Indicates
whether the doc_concentration
(Dirichlet parameter for document-topic
distribution) will be optimized during training. Setting this to true will
make the model more expressive and fit the training data better. Default: FALSE
A random seed. Set this value if you need your results to be reproducible across repeated calls.
Features column name, as a length-one character vector. The column should be single vector column of numeric values. Usually this column is output by ft_r_formula
.
Output column with estimates of the topic mixture distribution for each document (often called "theta" in the literature). Returns a vector of zeros for an empty document.
A character string used to uniquely identify the ML estimator.
Optional arguments, see Details.
#' @return The object returned depends on the class of x
. If it is a
spark_connection
, the function returns a ml_estimator
object. If
it is a ml_pipeline
, it will return a pipeline with the predictor
appended to it. If a tbl_spark
, it will return a tbl_spark
with
the predictions added to it.
A fitted LDA model returned by ml_lda()
.
Maximum number of terms to collect for each topic. Default value of 10.
test corpus to use for calculating log likelihood or log perplexity
doc_concentration
This is the parameter to a Dirichlet distribution, where larger values mean
more smoothing (more regularization). If not set by the user, then
doc_concentration
is set automatically. If set to singleton vector
[alpha], then alpha is replicated to a vector of length k in fitting.
Otherwise, the doc_concentration
vector must be length k.
(default = automatic)
Optimizer-specific parameter settings:
EM
Currently only supports symmetric distributions, so all values in the vector should be the same.
Values should be greater than 1.0
default = uniformly (50 / k) + 1, where 50/k is common in LDA libraries and +1 follows from Asuncion et al. (2009), who recommend a +1 adjustment for EM.
Online
Values should be greater than or equal to 0
default = uniformly (1.0 / k), following the implementation from here
topic_concentration
This is the parameter to a symmetric Dirichlet distribution.
Note: The topics' distributions over terms are called "beta" in the original LDA paper by Blei et al., but are called "phi" in many later papers such as Asuncion et al., 2009.
If not set by the user, then topic_concentration
is set automatically.
(default = automatic)
Optimizer-specific parameter settings:
EM
Value should be greater than 1.0
default = 0.1 + 1, where 0.1 gives a small amount of smoothing and +1 follows Asuncion et al. (2009), who recommend a +1 adjustment for EM.
Online
Value should be greater than or equal to 0
default = (1.0 / k), following the implementation from here.
topic_distribution_col
This uses a variational approximation following Hoffman et al. (2010), where the approximate distribution is called "gamma." Technically, this method returns this approximation "gamma" for each document.
For `ml_lda.tbl_spark` with the formula interface, you can specify named arguments in `...` that will be passed `ft_regex_tokenizer()`, `ft_stop_words_remover()`, and `ft_count_vectorizer()`. For example, to increase the default `min_token_length`, you can use `ml_lda(dataset, ~ text, min_token_length = 4)`.
Terminology for LDA:
"term" = "word": an element of the vocabulary
"token": instance of a term appearing in a document
"topic": multinomial distribution over terms representing some concept
"document": one piece of text, corresponding to one row in the input data
Original LDA paper (journal version): Blei, Ng, and Jordan. "Latent Dirichlet Allocation." JMLR, 2003.
Input data (features_col
): LDA is given a collection of documents as
input data, via the features_col
parameter. Each document is specified
as a Vector of length vocab_size
, where each entry is the count for
the corresponding term (word) in the document. Feature transformers such as
ft_tokenizer
and ft_count_vectorizer
can be
useful for converting text to word count vectors
if (FALSE) {
library(janeaustenr)
library(dplyr)
sc <- spark_connect(master = "local")
lines_tbl <- sdf_copy_to(sc,
austen_books()[c(1:30), ],
name = "lines_tbl",
overwrite = TRUE
)
# transform the data in a tidy form
lines_tbl_tidy <- lines_tbl %>%
ft_tokenizer(
input_col = "text",
output_col = "word_list"
) %>%
ft_stop_words_remover(
input_col = "word_list",
output_col = "wo_stop_words"
) %>%
mutate(text = explode(wo_stop_words)) %>%
filter(text != "") %>%
select(text, book)
lda_model <- lines_tbl_tidy %>%
ml_lda(~text, k = 4)
# vocabulary and topics
tidy(lda_model)
}
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