filter#

Methods to identify which examples have label issues in a classification dataset. The documentation below assumes a dataset with N examples and K classes. This module considers two types of datasets:

  • standard (multi-class) classification where each example is labeled as belonging to exactly one of K classes (e.g. labels = np.array([0,0,1,0,2,1]))

  • multi-label classification where each example can be labeled as belonging to multiple classes (e.g. labels = [[1,2],[1],[0],[],...])

Data:

Functions:

find_label_issues(labels, pred_probs, *[, ...])

Identifies potentially bad labels in a classification dataset using confident learning.

find_predicted_neq_given(labels, pred_probs, *)

A simple baseline approach that considers argmax(pred_probs) != labels as the examples with label issues.

find_label_issues_using_argmax_confusion_matrix(...)

A baseline approach that uses the confusion matrix of argmax(pred_probs) and labels as the confident joint and then uses cleanlab (confident learning) to find the label issues using this matrix.

cleanlab.filter.pred_probs_by_class: Dict[int, ndarray]#
cleanlab.filter.prune_count_matrix_cols: Dict[int, ndarray]#
cleanlab.filter.find_label_issues(labels, pred_probs, *, return_indices_ranked_by=None, rank_by_kwargs=None, filter_by='prune_by_noise_rate', multi_label=False, frac_noise=1.0, num_to_remove_per_class=None, min_examples_per_class=1, confident_joint=None, n_jobs=None, verbose=False)[source]#

Identifies potentially bad labels in a classification dataset using confident learning.

Returns a boolean mask for the entire dataset where True represents an example identified with a label issue and False represents an example that seems correctly labeled.

Instead of a mask, you can obtain indices of the examples with label issues in your dataset (sorted by issue severity) by specifying the return_indices_ranked_by argument. This determines which label quality score is used to quantify severity, and is useful to view only the top-J most severe issues in your dataset.

The number of indices returned as issues is controlled by frac_noise: reduce its value to identify fewer label issues. If you aren’t sure, leave this set to 1.0.

Tip: if you encounter the error “pred_probs is not defined”, try setting n_jobs=1.

Parameters:
  • labels (np.ndarray or list) – A discrete vector of noisy labels for a classification dataset, i.e. some labels may be erroneous. Format requirements: for dataset with K classes, each label must be integer in 0, 1, …, K-1. For a standard (multi-class) classification dataset where each example is labeled with one class, labels should be 1D array of shape (N,), for example: labels = [1,0,2,1,1,0...]. For a multi-label classification dataset where each example can belong to multiple (or no) classes, labels should be an iterable of iterables (e.g. List[List[int]]) whose i-th element corresponds to list of classes that i-th example belongs to (e.g. labels = [[1,2],[1],[0],[],...]).

  • pred_probs (np.ndarray, optional) –

    An array of shape (N, K) of model-predicted class probabilities, P(label=k|x). Each row of this matrix corresponds to an example x and contains the model-predicted probabilities that x belongs to each possible class, for each of the K classes. The columns must be ordered such that these probabilities correspond to class 0, 1, …, K-1.

    Note: Returned label issues are most accurate when they are computed based on out-of-sample pred_probs from your model. To obtain out-of-sample predicted probabilities for every datapoint in your dataset, you can use cross-validation. This is encouraged to get better results.

  • return_indices_ranked_by ({None, 'self_confidence', 'normalized_margin', 'confidence_weighted_entropy'}, default None) –

    Determines what is returned by this method: either a boolean mask or list of indices np.ndarray. If None, this function returns a boolean mask (True if example at index is label error). If not None, this function returns a sorted array of indices of examples with label issues (instead of a boolean mask). Indices are sorted by label quality score which can be one of:

    • 'normalized_margin': normalized margin (p(label = k) - max(p(label != k)))

    • 'self_confidence': [pred_probs[i][labels[i]] for i in label_issues_idx]

    • 'confidence_weighted_entropy': entropy(pred_probs) / self_confidence

  • rank_by_kwargs (dict, optional) – Optional keyword arguments to pass into scoring functions for ranking by label quality score (see rank.get_label_quality_scores).

  • filter_by ({'prune_by_class', 'prune_by_noise_rate', 'both', 'confident_learning', 'predicted_neq_given', 'low_normalized_margin', 'low_self_confidence'}, default 'prune_by_noise_rate') –

    Method to determine which examples are flagged as having label issue, so you can filter/prune them from the dataset. Options:

    • 'prune_by_noise_rate': filters examples with high probability of being mislabeled for every non-diagonal in the confident joint (see prune_counts_matrix in filter.py). These are the examples where (with high confidence) the given label is unlikely to match the predicted label for the example.

    • 'prune_by_class': filters the examples with smallest probability of belonging to their given class label for every class.

    • 'both': filters only those examples that would be filtered by both 'prune_by_noise_rate' and 'prune_by_class'.

    • 'confident_learning': filters the examples counted as part of the off-diagonals of the confident joint. These are the examples that are confidently predicted to be a different label than their given label.

    • 'predicted_neq_given': filters examples for which the predicted class (i.e. argmax of the predicted probabilities) does not match the given label.

    • 'low_normalized_margin': filters the examples with smallest normalized margin label quality score. The number of issues returned matches count.num_label_issues.

    • 'low_self_confidence': filters the examples with smallest self confidence label quality score. The number of issues returned matches count.num_label_issues.

  • multi_label (bool, optional) – If True, labels should be an iterable (e.g. list) of iterables, containing a list of class labels for each example, instead of just a single label. The multi-label setting supports classification tasks where an example can belong to more than 1 class or none of the classes (rather than exactly one class as in standard multi-class classification). Example of a multi-labeled labels input: [[0,1], [1], [0,2], [0,1,2], [0], [1], [], ...]. This says the first example in dataset belongs to both class 0 and class 1, according to its given label. Each row of pred_probs no longer needs to sum to 1 in multi-label settings, since one example can now belong to multiple classes simultaneously.

  • frac_noise (float, default 1.0) –

    Used to only return the “top” frac_noise * num_label_issues. The choice of which “top” label issues to return is dependent on the filter_by method used. It works by reducing the size of the off-diagonals of the joint distribution of given labels and true labels proportionally by frac_noise prior to estimating label issues with each method. This parameter only applies for filter_by=both, filter_by=prune_by_class, and filter_by=prune_by_noise_rate methods and currently is unused by other methods. When frac_noise=1.0, return all “confident” estimated noise indices (recommended).

    frac_noise * number_of_mislabeled_examples_in_class_k. Note: specifying frac_noise is not yet supported if multi_label is True.

  • num_to_remove_per_class (array_like) –

    An iterable of length K, the number of classes. E.g. if K = 3, num_to_remove_per_class=[5, 0, 1] would return the indices of the 5 most likely mislabeled examples in class 0, and the most likely mislabeled example in class 2.

    Note

    Only set this parameter if filter_by='prune_by_class'. You may use with filter_by='prune_by_noise_rate', but if num_to_remove_per_class=k, then either k-1, k, or k+1 examples may be removed for any class due to rounding error. If you need exactly ‘k’ examples removed from every class, you should use filter_by='prune_by_class'.

  • min_examples_per_class (int, default 1) – Minimum number of examples per class to avoid flagging as label issues. This is useful to avoid deleting too much data from one class when pruning noisy examples in datasets with rare classes.

  • confident_joint (np.ndarray, optional) – An array of shape (K, K) representing the confident joint, the matrix used for identifying label issues, which estimates a confident subset of the joint distribution of the noisy and true labels, P_{noisy label, true label}. Entry (j, k) in the matrix is the number of examples confidently counted into the pair of (noisy label=j, true label=k) classes. The confident_joint can be computed using count.compute_confident_joint. If not provided, it is computed from the given (noisy) labels and pred_probs. If multi_label is True, confident_joint should instead be a one-vs-rest array with shape (K, 2, 2) as returned by count.compute_confident_joint function.

  • n_jobs (optional) – Number of processing threads used by multiprocessing. Default None sets to the number of cores on your CPU (physical cores if you have psutil package installed, otherwise logical cores). Set this to 1 to disable parallel processing (if its causing issues). Windows users may see a speed-up with n_jobs=1.

  • verbose (optional) – If True, prints when multiprocessing happens.

Return type:

ndarray

Returns:

label_issues (np.ndarray) – If return_indices_ranked_by left unspecified, returns a boolean mask for the entire dataset where True represents a label issue and False represents an example that is accurately labeled with high confidence. If return_indices_ranked_by is specified, returns a shorter array of indices of examples identified to have label issues (i.e. those indices where the mask would be True), sorted by likelihood that the corresponding label is correct.

Note

Obtain the indices of examples with label issues in your dataset by setting return_indices_ranked_by.

cleanlab.filter.find_predicted_neq_given(labels, pred_probs, *, multi_label=False)[source]#

A simple baseline approach that considers argmax(pred_probs) != labels as the examples with label issues.

Parameters:
  • labels (np.ndarray or list) – Labels in the same format expected by the find_label_issues function.

  • pred_probs (np.ndarray) – Predicted-probabilities in the same format expected by the find_label_issues function.

  • multi_label (bool, optional) – Whether each example may have multiple labels or not (see documentation for the find_label_issues function).

Return type:

ndarray

Returns:

label_issues_mask (np.ndarray) – A boolean mask for the entire dataset where True represents a label issue and False represents an example that is accurately labeled with high confidence.

cleanlab.filter.find_label_issues_using_argmax_confusion_matrix(labels, pred_probs, *, calibrate=True, filter_by='prune_by_noise_rate')[source]#

A baseline approach that uses the confusion matrix of argmax(pred_probs) and labels as the confident joint and then uses cleanlab (confident learning) to find the label issues using this matrix.

The only difference between this and find_label_issues is that it uses the confusion matrix based on the argmax and given label instead of using the confident joint from count.compute_confident_joint.

Parameters:
  • labels (np.ndarray) – An array of shape (N,) of noisy labels, i.e. some labels may be erroneous. Elements must be in the set 0, 1, …, K-1, where K is the number of classes.

  • pred_probs (np.ndarray) – An array of shape (N, K) of model-predicted probabilities, P(label=k|x). Each row of this matrix corresponds to an example x and contains the model-predicted probabilities that x belongs to each possible class, for each of the K classes. The columns must be ordered such that these probabilities correspond to class 0, 1, …, K-1. pred_probs should have been computed using 3 (or higher) fold cross-validation.

  • calibrate (bool, default True) – Set to True to calibrate the confusion matrix created by pred != given labels. This calibration adjusts the confusion matrix / confident joint so that the prior (given noisy labels) is correct based on the original labels.

  • filter_by (str, default 'prune_by_noise_rate') – See filter_by argument of find_label_issues.

Return type:

ndarray

Returns:

label_issues_mask (np.ndarray) – A boolean mask for the entire dataset where True represents a label issue and False represents an example that is accurately labeled with high confidence.

Note

Multi-label classification is not supported in this method.