Classificação de texto com o TensorFlow Hub: resenhas de filmes

Veja no TensorFlow.org Executar no Google Colab Ver no GitHub Baixar caderno Veja os modelos do TF Hub

Este caderno classifica as resenhas de filmes como positivas ou negativas usando o texto da resenha. Este é um exemplo de classificação binária — ou de duas classes —, um tipo importante e amplamente aplicável de problema de aprendizado de máquina.

O tutorial demonstra a aplicação básica do aprendizado de transferência com o TensorFlow Hub e o Keras.

Ele usa o conjunto de dados do IMDB que contém o texto de 50.000 resenhas de filmes do Internet Movie Database . Eles são divididos em 25.000 revisões para treinamento e 25.000 revisões para teste. Os conjuntos de treinamento e teste são balanceados , o que significa que contêm um número igual de avaliações positivas e negativas.

Este notebook usa tf.keras , uma API de alto nível para construir e treinar modelos no TensorFlow e tensorflow_hub , uma biblioteca para carregar modelos treinados do TFHub em uma única linha de código. Para um tutorial de classificação de texto mais avançado usando tf.keras , consulte o Guia de Classificação de Texto MLCC .

pip install tensorflow-hub
pip install tensorflow-datasets
import os
import numpy as np

import tensorflow as tf
import tensorflow_hub as hub
import tensorflow_datasets as tfds

print("Version: ", tf.__version__)
print("Eager mode: ", tf.executing_eagerly())
print("Hub version: ", hub.__version__)
print("GPU is", "available" if tf.config.list_physical_devices("GPU") else "NOT AVAILABLE")
Version:  2.8.0-rc1
Eager mode:  True
Hub version:  0.12.0
GPU is available

Baixe o conjunto de dados do IMDB

O conjunto de dados do IMDB está disponível nas revisões do imdb ou nos conjuntos de dados do TensorFlow . O código a seguir baixa o conjunto de dados do IMDB para sua máquina (ou o tempo de execução do colab):

# Split the training set into 60% and 40% to end up with 15,000 examples
# for training, 10,000 examples for validation and 25,000 examples for testing.
train_data, validation_data, test_data = tfds.load(
    name="imdb_reviews", 
    split=('train[:60%]', 'train[60%:]', 'test'),
    as_supervised=True)

Explorar os dados

Vamos tomar um momento para entender o formato dos dados. Cada exemplo é uma frase que representa a crítica do filme e um rótulo correspondente. A sentença não é pré-processada de forma alguma. O rótulo é um valor inteiro de 0 ou 1, em que 0 é uma avaliação negativa e 1 é uma avaliação positiva.

Vamos imprimir os primeiros 10 exemplos.

train_examples_batch, train_labels_batch = next(iter(train_data.batch(10)))
train_examples_batch
<tf.Tensor: shape=(10,), dtype=string, numpy=
array([b"This was an absolutely terrible movie. Don't be lured in by Christopher Walken or Michael Ironside. Both are great actors, but this must simply be their worst role in history. Even their great acting could not redeem this movie's ridiculous storyline. This movie is an early nineties US propaganda piece. The most pathetic scenes were those when the Columbian rebels were making their cases for revolutions. Maria Conchita Alonso appeared phony, and her pseudo-love affair with Walken was nothing but a pathetic emotional plug in a movie that was devoid of any real meaning. I am disappointed that there are movies like this, ruining actor's like Christopher Walken's good name. I could barely sit through it.",
       b'I have been known to fall asleep during films, but this is usually due to a combination of things including, really tired, being warm and comfortable on the sette and having just eaten a lot. However on this occasion I fell asleep because the film was rubbish. The plot development was constant. Constantly slow and boring. Things seemed to happen, but with no explanation of what was causing them or why. I admit, I may have missed part of the film, but i watched the majority of it and everything just seemed to happen of its own accord without any real concern for anything else. I cant recommend this film at all.',
       b'Mann photographs the Alberta Rocky Mountains in a superb fashion, and Jimmy Stewart and Walter Brennan give enjoyable performances as they always seem to do. <br /><br />But come on Hollywood - a Mountie telling the people of Dawson City, Yukon to elect themselves a marshal (yes a marshal!) and to enforce the law themselves, then gunfighters battling it out on the streets for control of the town? <br /><br />Nothing even remotely resembling that happened on the Canadian side of the border during the Klondike gold rush. Mr. Mann and company appear to have mistaken Dawson City for Deadwood, the Canadian North for the American Wild West.<br /><br />Canadian viewers be prepared for a Reefer Madness type of enjoyable howl with this ludicrous plot, or, to shake your head in disgust.',
       b'This is the kind of film for a snowy Sunday afternoon when the rest of the world can go ahead with its own business as you descend into a big arm-chair and mellow for a couple of hours. Wonderful performances from Cher and Nicolas Cage (as always) gently row the plot along. There are no rapids to cross, no dangerous waters, just a warm and witty paddle through New York life at its best. A family film in every sense and one that deserves the praise it received.',
       b'As others have mentioned, all the women that go nude in this film are mostly absolutely gorgeous. The plot very ably shows the hypocrisy of the female libido. When men are around they want to be pursued, but when no "men" are around, they become the pursuers of a 14 year old boy. And the boy becomes a man really fast (we should all be so lucky at this age!). He then gets up the courage to pursue his true love.',
       b"This is a film which should be seen by anybody interested in, effected by, or suffering from an eating disorder. It is an amazingly accurate and sensitive portrayal of bulimia in a teenage girl, its causes and its symptoms. The girl is played by one of the most brilliant young actresses working in cinema today, Alison Lohman, who was later so spectacular in 'Where the Truth Lies'. I would recommend that this film be shown in all schools, as you will never see a better on this subject. Alison Lohman is absolutely outstanding, and one marvels at her ability to convey the anguish of a girl suffering from this compulsive disorder. If barometers tell us the air pressure, Alison Lohman tells us the emotional pressure with the same degree of accuracy. Her emotional range is so precise, each scene could be measured microscopically for its gradations of trauma, on a scale of rising hysteria and desperation which reaches unbearable intensity. Mare Winningham is the perfect choice to play her mother, and does so with immense sympathy and a range of emotions just as finely tuned as Lohman's. Together, they make a pair of sensitive emotional oscillators vibrating in resonance with one another. This film is really an astonishing achievement, and director Katt Shea should be proud of it. The only reason for not seeing it is if you are not interested in people. But even if you like nature films best, this is after all animal behaviour at the sharp edge. Bulimia is an extreme version of how a tormented soul can destroy her own body in a frenzy of despair. And if we don't sympathise with people suffering from the depths of despair, then we are dead inside.",
       b'Okay, you have:<br /><br />Penelope Keith as Miss Herringbone-Tweed, B.B.E. (Backbone of England.) She\'s killed off in the first scene - that\'s right, folks; this show has no backbone!<br /><br />Peter O\'Toole as Ol\' Colonel Cricket from The First War and now the emblazered Lord of the Manor.<br /><br />Joanna Lumley as the ensweatered Lady of the Manor, 20 years younger than the colonel and 20 years past her own prime but still glamourous (Brit spelling, not mine) enough to have a toy-boy on the side. It\'s alright, they have Col. Cricket\'s full knowledge and consent (they guy even comes \'round for Christmas!) Still, she\'s considerate of the colonel enough to have said toy-boy her own age (what a gal!)<br /><br />David McCallum as said toy-boy, equally as pointlessly glamourous as his squeeze. Pilcher couldn\'t come up with any cover for him within the story, so she gave him a hush-hush job at the Circus.<br /><br />and finally:<br /><br />Susan Hampshire as Miss Polonia Teacups, Venerable Headmistress of the Venerable Girls\' Boarding-School, serving tea in her office with a dash of deep, poignant advice for life in the outside world just before graduation. Her best bit of advice: "I\'ve only been to Nancherrow (the local Stately Home of England) once. I thought it was very beautiful but, somehow, not part of the real world." Well, we can\'t say they didn\'t warn us.<br /><br />Ah, Susan - time was, your character would have been running the whole show. They don\'t write \'em like that any more. Our loss, not yours.<br /><br />So - with a cast and setting like this, you have the re-makings of "Brideshead Revisited," right?<br /><br />Wrong! They took these 1-dimensional supporting roles because they paid so well. After all, acting is one of the oldest temp-jobs there is (YOU name another!)<br /><br />First warning sign: lots and lots of backlighting. They get around it by shooting outdoors - "hey, it\'s just the sunlight!"<br /><br />Second warning sign: Leading Lady cries a lot. When not crying, her eyes are moist. That\'s the law of romance novels: Leading Lady is "dewy-eyed."<br /><br />Henceforth, Leading Lady shall be known as L.L.<br /><br />Third warning sign: L.L. actually has stars in her eyes when she\'s in love. Still, I\'ll give Emily Mortimer an award just for having to act with that spotlight in her eyes (I wonder . did they use contacts?)<br /><br />And lastly, fourth warning sign: no on-screen female character is "Mrs." She\'s either "Miss" or "Lady."<br /><br />When all was said and done, I still couldn\'t tell you who was pursuing whom and why. I couldn\'t even tell you what was said and done.<br /><br />To sum up: they all live through World War II without anything happening to them at all.<br /><br />OK, at the end, L.L. finds she\'s lost her parents to the Japanese prison camps and baby sis comes home catatonic. Meanwhile (there\'s always a "meanwhile,") some young guy L.L. had a crush on (when, I don\'t know) comes home from some wartime tough spot and is found living on the street by Lady of the Manor (must be some street if SHE\'s going to find him there.) Both war casualties are whisked away to recover at Nancherrow (SOMEBODY has to be "whisked away" SOMEWHERE in these romance stories!)<br /><br />Great drama.',
       b'The film is based on a genuine 1950s novel.<br /><br />Journalist Colin McInnes wrote a set of three "London novels": "Absolute Beginners", "City of Spades" and "Mr Love and Justice". I have read all three. The first two are excellent. The last, perhaps an experiment that did not come off. But McInnes\'s work is highly acclaimed; and rightly so. This musical is the novelist\'s ultimate nightmare - to see the fruits of one\'s mind being turned into a glitzy, badly-acted, soporific one-dimensional apology of a film that says it captures the spirit of 1950s London, and does nothing of the sort.<br /><br />Thank goodness Colin McInnes wasn\'t alive to witness it.',
       b'I really love the sexy action and sci-fi films of the sixties and its because of the actress\'s that appeared in them. They found the sexiest women to be in these films and it didn\'t matter if they could act (Remember "Candy"?). The reason I was disappointed by this film was because it wasn\'t nostalgic enough. The story here has a European sci-fi film called "Dragonfly" being made and the director is fired. So the producers decide to let a young aspiring filmmaker (Jeremy Davies) to complete the picture. They\'re is one real beautiful woman in the film who plays Dragonfly but she\'s barely in it. Film is written and directed by Roman Coppola who uses some of his fathers exploits from his early days and puts it into the script. I wish the film could have been an homage to those early films. They could have lots of cameos by actors who appeared in them. There is one actor in this film who was popular from the sixties and its John Phillip Law (Barbarella). Gerard Depardieu, Giancarlo Giannini and Dean Stockwell appear as well. I guess I\'m going to have to continue waiting for a director to make a good homage to the films of the sixties. If any are reading this, "Make it as sexy as you can"! I\'ll be waiting!',
       b'Sure, this one isn\'t really a blockbuster, nor does it target such a position. "Dieter" is the first name of a quite popular German musician, who is either loved or hated for his kind of acting and thats exactly what this movie is about. It is based on the autobiography "Dieter Bohlen" wrote a few years ago but isn\'t meant to be accurate on that. The movie is filled with some sexual offensive content (at least for American standard) which is either amusing (not for the other "actors" of course) or dumb - it depends on your individual kind of humor or on you being a "Bohlen"-Fan or not. Technically speaking there isn\'t much to criticize. Speaking of me I find this movie to be an OK-movie.'],
      dtype=object)>

Vamos imprimir também as 10 primeiras etiquetas.

train_labels_batch
<tf.Tensor: shape=(10,), dtype=int64, numpy=array([0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0])>

Construir o modelo

A rede neural é criada empilhando camadas – isso requer três decisões arquiteturais principais:

  • Como representar o texto?
  • Quantas camadas usar no modelo?
  • Quantas unidades ocultas usar para cada camada?

Neste exemplo, os dados de entrada consistem em frases. Os rótulos a serem previstos são 0 ou 1.

Uma maneira de representar o texto é converter frases em vetores de incorporação. Use uma incorporação de texto pré-treinada como a primeira camada, que terá três vantagens:

  • Você não precisa se preocupar com o pré-processamento de texto,
  • Beneficie-se do aprendizado de transferência,
  • a incorporação tem um tamanho fixo, por isso é mais simples de processar.

Para este exemplo, você usa um modelo de incorporação de texto pré-treinado do TensorFlow Hub chamado google/nnlm-en-dim50/2 .

Existem muitos outros embeddings de texto pré-treinados do TFHub que podem ser usados ​​neste tutorial:

E muitos mais! Encontre mais modelos de incorporação de texto no TFHub.

Vamos primeiro criar uma camada Keras que usa um modelo do TensorFlow Hub para incorporar as frases e experimentá-lo em alguns exemplos de entrada. Observe que não importa o tamanho do texto de entrada, a forma de saída dos embeddings é: (num_examples, embedding_dimension) .

embedding = "https://tfhub.dev/google/nnlm-en-dim50/2"
hub_layer = hub.KerasLayer(embedding, input_shape=[], 
                           dtype=tf.string, trainable=True)
hub_layer(train_examples_batch[:3])
<tf.Tensor: shape=(3, 50), dtype=float32, numpy=
array([[ 0.5423194 , -0.01190171,  0.06337537,  0.0686297 , -0.16776839,
        -0.10581177,  0.168653  , -0.04998823, -0.31148052,  0.07910344,
         0.15442258,  0.01488661,  0.03930155,  0.19772716, -0.12215477,
        -0.04120982, -0.27041087, -0.21922147,  0.26517656, -0.80739075,
         0.25833526, -0.31004202,  0.2868321 ,  0.19433866, -0.29036498,
         0.0386285 , -0.78444123, -0.04793238,  0.41102988, -0.36388886,
        -0.58034706,  0.30269453,  0.36308962, -0.15227163, -0.4439151 ,
         0.19462997,  0.19528405,  0.05666233,  0.2890704 , -0.28468323,
        -0.00531206,  0.0571938 , -0.3201319 , -0.04418665, -0.08550781,
        -0.55847436, -0.2333639 , -0.20782956, -0.03543065, -0.17533456],
       [ 0.56338924, -0.12339553, -0.10862677,  0.7753425 , -0.07667087,
        -0.15752274,  0.01872334, -0.08169781, -0.3521876 ,  0.46373403,
        -0.08492758,  0.07166861, -0.00670818,  0.12686071, -0.19326551,
        -0.5262643 , -0.32958236,  0.14394784,  0.09043556, -0.54175544,
         0.02468163, -0.15456744,  0.68333143,  0.09068333, -0.45327246,
         0.23180094, -0.8615696 ,  0.3448039 ,  0.12838459, -0.58759046,
        -0.40712303,  0.23061076,  0.48426905, -0.2712814 , -0.5380918 ,
         0.47016335,  0.2257274 , -0.00830665,  0.28462422, -0.30498496,
         0.04400366,  0.25025868,  0.14867125,  0.4071703 , -0.15422425,
        -0.06878027, -0.40825695, -0.31492147,  0.09283663, -0.20183429],
       [ 0.7456156 ,  0.21256858,  0.1440033 ,  0.52338624,  0.11032254,
         0.00902788, -0.36678016, -0.08938274, -0.24165548,  0.33384597,
        -0.111946  , -0.01460045, -0.00716449,  0.19562715,  0.00685217,
        -0.24886714, -0.42796353,  0.1862    , -0.05241097, -0.664625  ,
         0.13449019, -0.22205493,  0.08633009,  0.43685383,  0.2972681 ,
         0.36140728, -0.71968895,  0.05291242, -0.1431612 , -0.15733941,
        -0.15056324, -0.05988007, -0.08178931, -0.15569413, -0.09303784,
        -0.18971168,  0.0762079 , -0.02541647, -0.27134502, -0.3392682 ,
        -0.10296471, -0.27275252, -0.34078008,  0.20083308, -0.26644838,
         0.00655449, -0.05141485, -0.04261916, -0.4541363 ,  0.20023566]],
      dtype=float32)>

Vamos agora construir o modelo completo:

model = tf.keras.Sequential()
model.add(hub_layer)
model.add(tf.keras.layers.Dense(16, activation='relu'))
model.add(tf.keras.layers.Dense(1))

model.summary()
Model: "sequential"
_________________________________________________________________
 Layer (type)                Output Shape              Param #   
=================================================================
 keras_layer (KerasLayer)    (None, 50)                48190600  
                                                                 
 dense (Dense)               (None, 16)                816       
                                                                 
 dense_1 (Dense)             (None, 1)                 17        
                                                                 
=================================================================
Total params: 48,191,433
Trainable params: 48,191,433
Non-trainable params: 0
_________________________________________________________________

As camadas são empilhadas sequencialmente para construir o classificador:

  1. A primeira camada é uma camada do TensorFlow Hub. Essa camada usa um modelo salvo pré-treinado para mapear uma frase em seu vetor de incorporação. O modelo de incorporação de texto pré-treinado que você está usando ( google/nnlm-en-dim50/2 ) divide a frase em tokens, incorpora cada token e, em seguida, combina a incorporação. As dimensões resultantes são: (num_examples, embedding_dimension) . Para este modelo NNLM, o embedding_dimension é 50.
  2. Este vetor de saída de comprimento fixo é canalizado através de uma camada totalmente conectada ( Dense ) com 16 unidades ocultas.
  3. A última camada é densamente conectada com um único nó de saída.

Vamos compilar o modelo.

Função de perda e otimizador

Um modelo precisa de uma função de perda e um otimizador para treinamento. Como este é um problema de classificação binária e o modelo gera logits (uma camada de unidade única com uma ativação linear), você usará a função de perda binary_crossentropy .

Esta não é a única opção para uma função de perda, você pode, por exemplo, escolher mean_squared_error . Mas, geralmente, binary_crossentropy é melhor para lidar com probabilidades - mede a "distância" entre distribuições de probabilidade ou, em nosso caso, entre a distribuição de verdade e as previsões.

Mais tarde, quando estiver explorando problemas de regressão (digamos, para prever o preço de uma casa), você verá como usar outra função de perda chamada erro quadrático médio.

Agora, configure o modelo para usar um otimizador e uma função de perda:

model.compile(optimizer='adam',
              loss=tf.keras.losses.BinaryCrossentropy(from_logits=True),
              metrics=['accuracy'])

Treine o modelo

Treine o modelo por 10 épocas em mini-lotes de 512 amostras. São 10 iterações sobre todas as amostras nos tensores x_train e y_train . Durante o treinamento, monitore a perda e a precisão do modelo nas 10.000 amostras do conjunto de validação:

history = model.fit(train_data.shuffle(10000).batch(512),
                    epochs=10,
                    validation_data=validation_data.batch(512),
                    verbose=1)
Epoch 1/10
30/30 [==============================] - 3s 59ms/step - loss: 0.6707 - accuracy: 0.5317 - val_loss: 0.6150 - val_accuracy: 0.5882
Epoch 2/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 57ms/step - loss: 0.5382 - accuracy: 0.7012 - val_loss: 0.4972 - val_accuracy: 0.7450
Epoch 3/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 56ms/step - loss: 0.3976 - accuracy: 0.8246 - val_loss: 0.4023 - val_accuracy: 0.8149
Epoch 4/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 61ms/step - loss: 0.2879 - accuracy: 0.8894 - val_loss: 0.3503 - val_accuracy: 0.8385
Epoch 5/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 59ms/step - loss: 0.2120 - accuracy: 0.9243 - val_loss: 0.3248 - val_accuracy: 0.8530
Epoch 6/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 54ms/step - loss: 0.1560 - accuracy: 0.9513 - val_loss: 0.3148 - val_accuracy: 0.8663
Epoch 7/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 55ms/step - loss: 0.1147 - accuracy: 0.9680 - val_loss: 0.3168 - val_accuracy: 0.8675
Epoch 8/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 56ms/step - loss: 0.0847 - accuracy: 0.9791 - val_loss: 0.3199 - val_accuracy: 0.8670
Epoch 9/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 54ms/step - loss: 0.0617 - accuracy: 0.9880 - val_loss: 0.3272 - val_accuracy: 0.8649
Epoch 10/10
30/30 [==============================] - 2s 57ms/step - loss: 0.0449 - accuracy: 0.9931 - val_loss: 0.3379 - val_accuracy: 0.8651

Avalie o modelo

E vamos ver como o modelo se comporta. Dois valores serão retornados. Perda (um número que representa nosso erro, valores mais baixos são melhores) e precisão.

results = model.evaluate(test_data.batch(512), verbose=2)

for name, value in zip(model.metrics_names, results):
  print("%s: %.3f" % (name, value))
49/49 - 2s - loss: 0.3599 - accuracy: 0.8523 - 2s/epoch - 34ms/step
loss: 0.360
accuracy: 0.852

Essa abordagem bastante ingênua atinge uma precisão de cerca de 87%. Com abordagens mais avançadas, o modelo deve se aproximar de 95%.

Leitura adicional

# MIT License
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# Copyright (c) 2017 François Chollet
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