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Transfer Learning for Computer Vision Tutorial

Author: Sasank Chilamkurthy

In this tutorial, you will learn how to train a convolutional neural network for image classification using transfer learning. You can read more about the transfer learning at cs231n notes

Quoting these notes,

In practice, very few people train an entire Convolutional Network from scratch (with random initialization), because it is relatively rare to have a dataset of sufficient size. Instead, it is common to pretrain a ConvNet on a very large dataset (e.g. ImageNet, which contains 1.2 million images with 1000 categories), and then use the ConvNet either as an initialization or a fixed feature extractor for the task of interest.

These two major transfer learning scenarios look as follows:

  • Finetuning the ConvNet: Instead of random initialization, we initialize the network with a pretrained network, like the one that is trained on imagenet 1000 dataset. Rest of the training looks as usual.

  • ConvNet as fixed feature extractor: Here, we will freeze the weights for all of the network except that of the final fully connected layer. This last fully connected layer is replaced with a new one with random weights and only this layer is trained.

# License: BSD
# Author: Sasank Chilamkurthy

import torch
import torch.nn as nn
import torch.optim as optim
from torch.optim import lr_scheduler
import torch.backends.cudnn as cudnn
import numpy as np
import torchvision
from torchvision import datasets, models, transforms
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import time
import os
from PIL import Image
from tempfile import TemporaryDirectory

cudnn.benchmark = True
plt.ion()   # interactive mode
<contextlib.ExitStack object at 0x7f1d3fa967a0>

Load Data

We will use torchvision and torch.utils.data packages for loading the data.

The problem we’re going to solve today is to train a model to classify ants and bees. We have about 120 training images each for ants and bees. There are 75 validation images for each class. Usually, this is a very small dataset to generalize upon, if trained from scratch. Since we are using transfer learning, we should be able to generalize reasonably well.

This dataset is a very small subset of imagenet.

Note

Download the data from here and extract it to the current directory.

# Data augmentation and normalization for training
# Just normalization for validation
data_transforms = {
    'train': transforms.Compose([
        transforms.RandomResizedCrop(224),
        transforms.RandomHorizontalFlip(),
        transforms.ToTensor(),
        transforms.Normalize([0.485, 0.456, 0.406], [0.229, 0.224, 0.225])
    ]),
    'val': transforms.Compose([
        transforms.Resize(256),
        transforms.CenterCrop(224),
        transforms.ToTensor(),
        transforms.Normalize([0.485, 0.456, 0.406], [0.229, 0.224, 0.225])
    ]),
}

data_dir = 'data/hymenoptera_data'
image_datasets = {x: datasets.ImageFolder(os.path.join(data_dir, x),
                                          data_transforms[x])
                  for x in ['train', 'val']}
dataloaders = {x: torch.utils.data.DataLoader(image_datasets[x], batch_size=4,
                                             shuffle=True, num_workers=4)
              for x in ['train', 'val']}
dataset_sizes = {x: len(image_datasets[x]) for x in ['train', 'val']}
class_names = image_datasets['train'].classes

device = torch.device("cuda:0" if torch.cuda.is_available() else "cpu")

Visualize a few images

Let’s visualize a few training images so as to understand the data augmentations.

def imshow(inp, title=None):
    """Display image for Tensor."""
    inp = inp.numpy().transpose((1, 2, 0))
    mean = np.array([0.485, 0.456, 0.406])
    std = np.array([0.229, 0.224, 0.225])
    inp = std * inp + mean
    inp = np.clip(inp, 0, 1)
    plt.imshow(inp)
    if title is not None:
        plt.title(title)
    plt.pause(0.001)  # pause a bit so that plots are updated


# Get a batch of training data
inputs, classes = next(iter(dataloaders['train']))

# Make a grid from batch
out = torchvision.utils.make_grid(inputs)

imshow(out, title=[class_names[x] for x in classes])
['ants', 'ants', 'ants', 'ants']

Training the model

Now, let’s write a general function to train a model. Here, we will illustrate:

  • Scheduling the learning rate

  • Saving the best model

In the following, parameter scheduler is an LR scheduler object from torch.optim.lr_scheduler.

def train_model(model, criterion, optimizer, scheduler, num_epochs=25):
    since = time.time()

    # Create a temporary directory to save training checkpoints
    with TemporaryDirectory() as tempdir:
        best_model_params_path = os.path.join(tempdir, 'best_model_params.pt')

        torch.save(model.state_dict(), best_model_params_path)
        best_acc = 0.0

        for epoch in range(num_epochs):
            print(f'Epoch {epoch}/{num_epochs - 1}')
            print('-' * 10)

            # Each epoch has a training and validation phase
            for phase in ['train', 'val']:
                if phase == 'train':
                    model.train()  # Set model to training mode
                else:
                    model.eval()   # Set model to evaluate mode

                running_loss = 0.0
                running_corrects = 0

                # Iterate over data.
                for inputs, labels in dataloaders[phase]:
                    inputs = inputs.to(device)
                    labels = labels.to(device)

                    # zero the parameter gradients
                    optimizer.zero_grad()

                    # forward
                    # track history if only in train
                    with torch.set_grad_enabled(phase == 'train'):
                        outputs = model(inputs)
                        _, preds = torch.max(outputs, 1)
                        loss = criterion(outputs, labels)

                        # backward + optimize only if in training phase
                        if phase == 'train':
                            loss.backward()
                            optimizer.step()

                    # statistics
                    running_loss += loss.item() * inputs.size(0)
                    running_corrects += torch.sum(preds == labels.data)
                if phase == 'train':
                    scheduler.step()

                epoch_loss = running_loss / dataset_sizes[phase]
                epoch_acc = running_corrects.double() / dataset_sizes[phase]

                print(f'{phase} Loss: {epoch_loss:.4f} Acc: {epoch_acc:.4f}')

                # deep copy the model
                if phase == 'val' and epoch_acc > best_acc:
                    best_acc = epoch_acc
                    torch.save(model.state_dict(), best_model_params_path)

            print()

        time_elapsed = time.time() - since
        print(f'Training complete in {time_elapsed // 60:.0f}m {time_elapsed % 60:.0f}s')
        print(f'Best val Acc: {best_acc:4f}')

        # load best model weights
        model.load_state_dict(torch.load(best_model_params_path))
    return model

Visualizing the model predictions

Generic function to display predictions for a few images

def visualize_model(model, num_images=6):
    was_training = model.training
    model.eval()
    images_so_far = 0
    fig = plt.figure()

    with torch.no_grad():
        for i, (inputs, labels) in enumerate(dataloaders['val']):
            inputs = inputs.to(device)
            labels = labels.to(device)

            outputs = model(inputs)
            _, preds = torch.max(outputs, 1)

            for j in range(inputs.size()[0]):
                images_so_far += 1
                ax = plt.subplot(num_images//2, 2, images_so_far)
                ax.axis('off')
                ax.set_title(f'predicted: {class_names[preds[j]]}')
                imshow(inputs.cpu().data[j])

                if images_so_far == num_images:
                    model.train(mode=was_training)
                    return
        model.train(mode=was_training)

Finetuning the ConvNet

Load a pretrained model and reset final fully connected layer.

model_ft = models.resnet18(weights='IMAGENET1K_V1')
num_ftrs = model_ft.fc.in_features
# Here the size of each output sample is set to 2.
# Alternatively, it can be generalized to ``nn.Linear(num_ftrs, len(class_names))``.
model_ft.fc = nn.Linear(num_ftrs, 2)

model_ft = model_ft.to(device)

criterion = nn.CrossEntropyLoss()

# Observe that all parameters are being optimized
optimizer_ft = optim.SGD(model_ft.parameters(), lr=0.001, momentum=0.9)

# Decay LR by a factor of 0.1 every 7 epochs
exp_lr_scheduler = lr_scheduler.StepLR(optimizer_ft, step_size=7, gamma=0.1)
Downloading: "https://download.pytorch.org/models/resnet18-f37072fd.pth" to /var/lib/ci-user/.cache/torch/hub/checkpoints/resnet18-f37072fd.pth

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Train and evaluate

It should take around 15-25 min on CPU. On GPU though, it takes less than a minute.

model_ft = train_model(model_ft, criterion, optimizer_ft, exp_lr_scheduler,
                       num_epochs=25)
Epoch 0/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4783 Acc: 0.7623
val Loss: 0.2760 Acc: 0.8824

Epoch 1/24
----------
train Loss: 0.5329 Acc: 0.7951
val Loss: 0.6103 Acc: 0.7320

Epoch 2/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4302 Acc: 0.8115
val Loss: 0.2388 Acc: 0.9216

Epoch 3/24
----------
train Loss: 0.6277 Acc: 0.7664
val Loss: 0.2923 Acc: 0.8954

Epoch 4/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4450 Acc: 0.8484
val Loss: 0.2986 Acc: 0.8889

Epoch 5/24
----------
train Loss: 0.5234 Acc: 0.7664
val Loss: 0.3223 Acc: 0.8824

Epoch 6/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3756 Acc: 0.8320
val Loss: 0.2878 Acc: 0.9020

Epoch 7/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3943 Acc: 0.8279
val Loss: 0.2536 Acc: 0.9216

Epoch 8/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2258 Acc: 0.9221
val Loss: 0.2343 Acc: 0.9150

Epoch 9/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2850 Acc: 0.8852
val Loss: 0.2616 Acc: 0.9020

Epoch 10/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3512 Acc: 0.8402
val Loss: 0.2060 Acc: 0.9346

Epoch 11/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3110 Acc: 0.8648
val Loss: 0.3005 Acc: 0.8693

Epoch 12/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2395 Acc: 0.8934
val Loss: 0.2538 Acc: 0.9085

Epoch 13/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2920 Acc: 0.8648
val Loss: 0.2350 Acc: 0.9150

Epoch 14/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2651 Acc: 0.8811
val Loss: 0.2932 Acc: 0.8824

Epoch 15/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3105 Acc: 0.8566
val Loss: 0.3525 Acc: 0.8562

Epoch 16/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2434 Acc: 0.9180
val Loss: 0.2690 Acc: 0.8954

Epoch 17/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2756 Acc: 0.8975
val Loss: 0.2252 Acc: 0.9216

Epoch 18/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2950 Acc: 0.8811
val Loss: 0.2885 Acc: 0.8758

Epoch 19/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2037 Acc: 0.9139
val Loss: 0.2460 Acc: 0.9085

Epoch 20/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2401 Acc: 0.9057
val Loss: 0.2427 Acc: 0.9085

Epoch 21/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2563 Acc: 0.8893
val Loss: 0.3043 Acc: 0.8693

Epoch 22/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3150 Acc: 0.8811
val Loss: 0.2389 Acc: 0.9150

Epoch 23/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2595 Acc: 0.8852
val Loss: 0.2423 Acc: 0.9150

Epoch 24/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3051 Acc: 0.8689
val Loss: 0.2489 Acc: 0.9150

Training complete in 0m 30s
Best val Acc: 0.934641
visualize_model(model_ft)
predicted: ants, predicted: bees, predicted: ants, predicted: bees, predicted: bees, predicted: ants

ConvNet as fixed feature extractor

Here, we need to freeze all the network except the final layer. We need to set requires_grad = False to freeze the parameters so that the gradients are not computed in backward().

You can read more about this in the documentation here.

model_conv = torchvision.models.resnet18(weights='IMAGENET1K_V1')
for param in model_conv.parameters():
    param.requires_grad = False

# Parameters of newly constructed modules have requires_grad=True by default
num_ftrs = model_conv.fc.in_features
model_conv.fc = nn.Linear(num_ftrs, 2)

model_conv = model_conv.to(device)

criterion = nn.CrossEntropyLoss()

# Observe that only parameters of final layer are being optimized as
# opposed to before.
optimizer_conv = optim.SGD(model_conv.fc.parameters(), lr=0.001, momentum=0.9)

# Decay LR by a factor of 0.1 every 7 epochs
exp_lr_scheduler = lr_scheduler.StepLR(optimizer_conv, step_size=7, gamma=0.1)

Train and evaluate

On CPU this will take about half the time compared to previous scenario. This is expected as gradients don’t need to be computed for most of the network. However, forward does need to be computed.

model_conv = train_model(model_conv, criterion, optimizer_conv,
                         exp_lr_scheduler, num_epochs=25)
Epoch 0/24
----------
train Loss: 0.6996 Acc: 0.6516
val Loss: 0.2014 Acc: 0.9346

Epoch 1/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4233 Acc: 0.8033
val Loss: 0.2656 Acc: 0.8758

Epoch 2/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4603 Acc: 0.7869
val Loss: 0.1847 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 3/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3096 Acc: 0.8566
val Loss: 0.1747 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 4/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4427 Acc: 0.8156
val Loss: 0.1630 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 5/24
----------
train Loss: 0.5505 Acc: 0.7828
val Loss: 0.1643 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 6/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3004 Acc: 0.8607
val Loss: 0.1744 Acc: 0.9542

Epoch 7/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4083 Acc: 0.8361
val Loss: 0.1892 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 8/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4483 Acc: 0.7910
val Loss: 0.1984 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 9/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3335 Acc: 0.8279
val Loss: 0.1942 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 10/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2413 Acc: 0.8934
val Loss: 0.2001 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 11/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3107 Acc: 0.8689
val Loss: 0.1801 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 12/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3032 Acc: 0.8689
val Loss: 0.1669 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 13/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3587 Acc: 0.8525
val Loss: 0.1900 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 14/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2771 Acc: 0.8893
val Loss: 0.2318 Acc: 0.9216

Epoch 15/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3064 Acc: 0.8852
val Loss: 0.1909 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 16/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4243 Acc: 0.8238
val Loss: 0.2227 Acc: 0.9346

Epoch 17/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3297 Acc: 0.8238
val Loss: 0.1917 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 18/24
----------
train Loss: 0.4235 Acc: 0.8238
val Loss: 0.1766 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 19/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2500 Acc: 0.8934
val Loss: 0.2003 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 20/24
----------
train Loss: 0.2413 Acc: 0.8934
val Loss: 0.1820 Acc: 0.9477

Epoch 21/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3762 Acc: 0.8115
val Loss: 0.1842 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 22/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3485 Acc: 0.8566
val Loss: 0.2166 Acc: 0.9281

Epoch 23/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3626 Acc: 0.8361
val Loss: 0.1747 Acc: 0.9412

Epoch 24/24
----------
train Loss: 0.3840 Acc: 0.8320
val Loss: 0.1768 Acc: 0.9412

Training complete in 0m 22s
Best val Acc: 0.954248
visualize_model(model_conv)

plt.ioff()
plt.show()
predicted: bees, predicted: ants, predicted: bees, predicted: bees, predicted: ants, predicted: ants

Inference on custom images

Use the trained model to make predictions on custom images and visualize the predicted class labels along with the images.

def visualize_model_predictions(model,img_path):
    was_training = model.training
    model.eval()

    img = Image.open(img_path)
    img = data_transforms['val'](img)
    img = img.unsqueeze(0)
    img = img.to(device)

    with torch.no_grad():
        outputs = model(img)
        _, preds = torch.max(outputs, 1)

        ax = plt.subplot(2,2,1)
        ax.axis('off')
        ax.set_title(f'Predicted: {class_names[preds[0]]}')
        imshow(img.cpu().data[0])

        model.train(mode=was_training)
visualize_model_predictions(
    model_conv,
    img_path='data/hymenoptera_data/val/bees/72100438_73de9f17af.jpg'
)

plt.ioff()
plt.show()
Predicted: bees

Further Learning

If you would like to learn more about the applications of transfer learning, checkout our Quantized Transfer Learning for Computer Vision Tutorial.

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