Multi-level modeling with Hamiltonian Monte Carlo

Sigrid Keydana

2022-08-31

Hierarchical models of any complexity may be specified using tfd_joint_distribution_sequential(). As hinted at by that function’s name, it builds a representation of a joint distribution where every component may optionally depend on components declared before it.

The model is then fitted to data using some form of Monte Carlo algorithm – Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC), in most cases. Supplementing Monte Carlo methods is an implementation of Variational Inference (VI), but we don’t cover VI in this document.

We illustrate the process by example, using the reedfrogs dataset from Richard McElreath’s rethinking package. Each row in the dataset describes one tadpole tank, with its initial count of inhabitants (density) and number of survivors (surv).

# assume it's version 1.14, with eager not yet being the default
library(tensorflow)
tf$enable_v2_behavior()

library(tfprobability)
library(rethinking)
library(zeallot)
library(purrr)

data("reedfrogs")
d <- reedfrogs
str(d)
'data.frame':   48 obs. of  5 variables:
 $ density : int  10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 ...
 $ pred    : Factor w/ 2 levels "no","pred": 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 ...
 $ size    : Factor w/ 2 levels "big","small": 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 1 ...
 $ surv    : int  9 10 7 10 9 9 10 9 4 9 ...
 $ propsurv: num  0.9 1 0.7 1 0.9 0.9 1 0.9 0.4 0.9 ...

We port to tfprobability the partially-pooled model presented in McElreath’s book. With partial pooling, each tank gets its own probability of survival.

In the model specification, we list the global priors first; then comes the intermediate layer yielding the per-tank priors; finally we have the likelihood which in this case is a binomial:

n_tadpole_tanks <- nrow(d)
n_surviving <- d$surv
n_start <- d$density

model <- tfd_joint_distribution_sequential(
  list(
    # a_bar, the prior for the mean of the normal distribution of per-tank logits
    tfd_normal(loc = 0, scale = 1.5),
    # sigma, the prior for the variance of the normal distribution of per-tank logits
    tfd_exponential(rate = 1),
    # normal distribution of per-tank logits
    # parameters sigma and a_bar refer to the outputs of the above two distributions
    function(sigma, a_bar)
      tfd_sample_distribution(
        tfd_normal(loc = a_bar, scale = sigma),
        sample_shape = list(n_tadpole_tanks)
      ),
    # binomial distribution of survival counts
    # parameter l refers to the output of the normal distribution immediately above
    function(l)
      tfd_independent(
        tfd_binomial(total_count = n_start, logits = l),
        reinterpreted_batch_ndims = 1
      )
  )
)

Our model technically being a distribution, we can verify it conforms to our expectations by sampling from it:

s <- model %>% tfd_sample(2)
s
[[1]]
tf.Tensor([2.1276963  0.26374984], shape=(2,), dtype=float32)

[[2]]
tf.Tensor([1.0527238 2.0026767], shape=(2,), dtype=float32)

[[3]]
tf.Tensor(
[[ 5.3084397e-01  4.1868687e-03  6.5364146e-01  2.2994227e+00
   ...
   2.0958326e+00  8.9087760e-01  1.6273866e+00  2.7854009e+00]
 [-5.5288523e-01  1.0414324e+00 -1.3420627e-01  2.5128570e+00
  ...
  -6.6325682e-01  3.0505228e+00  8.1649482e-01  1.0340663e+00]], shape=(2, 48), dtype=float32)

[[4]]
tf.Tensor(
[[ 7.  6.  7. 10. 10.  8. 10.  9.  7. 10.  9. 10. 10.  7.  9. 10. 22. 25.
  17. 22. 17. 19. 21. 22. 19. 19. 19. 25. 23. 25. 23. 15. 32. 33. 32. 34.
  35. 34. 28. 33. 33. 32. 26. 31. 33. 30. 31. 33.]
 [ 2.  8.  4. 10.  6.  1.  8.  3.  7.  9.  1.  0.  5. 10.  4.  5.  2. 21.
   1. 14.  4. 14.  9.  6. 12.  0. 20. 19.  1. 15. 15.  7. 30.  7. 12.  4.
  23.  3. 16. 34. 35.  5. 14. 10. 20. 32. 19. 24.]], shape=(2, 48), dtype=float32)

Another useful correctness check is that it yields a scalar log likelihood:

model %>% tfd_log_prob(s)
tf.Tensor([-149.4476  -193.44107], shape=(2,), dtype=float32)

`

Besides the model, we need to specify the loss, which here is just the joint log likelihood of the parameters and the target variable:

logprob <- function(a, s, l)
  model %>% tfd_log_prob(list(a, s, l, n_surviving))

Now we can set up HMC sampling, making use of mcmc_simple_step_size_adaptation for dynamic step size evolution based on a desired acceptance probability.

# number of steps after burnin
n_steps <- 500
# number of chains
n_chain <- 4
# number of burnin steps
n_burnin <- 500

hmc <- mcmc_hamiltonian_monte_carlo(
  target_log_prob_fn = logprob,
  num_leapfrog_steps = 3,
  # one step size for each parameter
  step_size = list(0.1, 0.1, 0.1),
) %>%
  mcmc_simple_step_size_adaptation(target_accept_prob = 0.8,
                                   num_adaptation_steps = n_burnin)

The actual sampling should run on the TensorFlow graph for performance. So if we’re executing in eager mode, we wrap the call in tf_function:

# initial values to start the sampler
c(initial_a, initial_s, initial_logits, .) %<-% (model %>% tfd_sample(n_chain))

# optionally retrieve metadata such as acceptance ratio and step size
trace_fn <- function(state, pkr) {
  list(pkr$inner_results$is_accepted,
       pkr$inner_results$accepted_results$step_size)
}

run_mcmc <- function(kernel) {
  kernel %>% mcmc_sample_chain(
    num_results = n_steps,
    num_burnin_steps = n_burnin,
    current_state = list(initial_a, tf$ones_like(initial_s), initial_logits),
    trace_fn = trace_fn
  )
}

run_mcmc <- tf_function(run_mcmc)
res <- run_mcmc(hmc)

Now res$all_states contains the samples from the four chains, while res$trace has the diagnostic output.

mcmc_trace <- res$all_states

In our example, we have three levels of learned parameters (the two “hyperpriors” and the per-tank prior), so the samples come as a list of three. For each distribution, the first dimension reflects the number of samples per chain, the second, the number of chains and the third, the number of parameters in the chain.

map(mcmc_trace, ~ compose(dim, as.array)(.x))
[[1]]
[1] 500   4

[[2]]
[1] 500   4

[[3]]
[1] 500   4  48

We can obtain the rhat value, as well as the effective sample size, using mcmc_potential_scale_reduction and mcmc_effective_sample_size, respectively:

mcmc_potential_scale_reduction(mcmc_trace)
mcmc_effective_sample_size(mcmc_trace)

These again are returned as lists of three.

Rounding up on diagnostic output, we may inspect individual acceptance in res$trace[[1]] and step sizes in res$trace[[2]].

For ways to plot the samples and create summary output, as well as some background narrative, see Tadpoles on TensorFlow: Hierarchical partial pooling with tfprobability and its follow-up, Hierarchical partial pooling, continued: Varying slopes models with TensorFlow Probability on the TensorFlow for R blog.