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Reproducible Code for "Spatial Bayesian Neural Networks"

Andrew Zammit-Mangion, Michael D. Kaminski, Ba-Hien Tran, Maurizio Filippone, Noel Cressie

This page provides reproducible code for the paper "Spatial Bayesian Neural Networks" which is published here. The arXiv version of the paper can be found here.

Spatial Bayesian neural networks (SBNNs) are Bayesian neural networks that are adapted for modelling spatial processes. They incorporate a spatial embedding layer and, possibly, spatially varying weights and biases. The code in this repository will calibrate BNNs and SBNNs to three "target" processes: a stationary Gaussian process, a non-stationary Gaussian process, and a stationary lognormal process. Results, saved in the figures/ directory, show that the SBNN variants can reproduce properties of these target processes better than classical BNNs of similar complexity. The code in this repo will also make inference from data generated using a Gaussian process and a max-stable process. Since we used mclapply to generate data from the max-stable process and did not save the seeds when doing so, if you would like to reproduce the results exactly please download the data set we used here and put it into the src/data/ folder instead of running src/2a_Gen_max_stable_data.R.

drawing drawing

Repo Structure

The repository contains the following structure:

├── bnn_spatial/                     # Python package
├── src/                             # Source scripts folder
    ├── configs/                     # Configuration files
    ├── data/                        # Data folder for max-stable sims
    ├── figures/                     # Output figures
    ├── intermediates/               # Intermediary outputs	
    ├── 1_BNN_degeneracy.py          # Script to gen. data for Fig. 1
    ├── 2a_Gen_max_stable_data.R     # Script to gen. data for Sect 5.2	
    ├── 2b_Preprocess_max_stable.py  # Script to process data for Sect 5.2	
    ├── 2a_Gen_max_stable_data.R     # Script to gen. exact resluts for Sect 5.2		
    ├── 3_FitModels.py               # Script to gen. data for sim studies
    ├── 4_Plot_Results.R             # Plot all figures
    ├── utils.R                      # R utility functions
├── Makefile                         # Run all sim. experiments and plot results
├── Readme.md                        # This file

Instructions

We suggest installing the following conda environment

conda create -n bnn-spatial pytorch==1.9.0 torchvision==0.10.0 torchaudio==0.9.0 cudatoolkit=11.1 -c pytorch -c conda-forge

Activate the conda environment, then install the required python packages

pip3 install matplotlib scipy seaborn pandas pyyaml

(Note: On Windows, after the installation of the python packages, we had to uninstall and re-install pillow for the code to work. Simply do pip3 uninstall pillow and then pip install pillow.)

Clone the repository, activate the conda environment, and then call make. This will generate the data for Figure 1 and also run all the simulation experiments according to the configurations given in the configs/ directory. Note that about 6 GB of GPU memory is required for the BNN and SBNN-SI variants. Around 76 GB is required for the SBNN-SV variants, possibly due to some coding inefficiencies. SBNN-SVs can therefore only be calibrated on high-end GPUs (in our case we used an NVIDIA A100). It may take a few days to reproduce the results for all the experiments. If you would just like to run one example, we suggest the following:

python src/FitModels.py --config src/configs/Section4_1_SBNN-SI.yaml

After the simulations are complete, make will call src/Plot_Results.R to generate all manuscript figures. Please make sure you have the packages listed at the top of this R script installed.

Please note that the results of the max-stable process are not exacty reproducible. If you wish to reproduce these exactly, please download the data from here and put into the /src/data folder.

Note: The code may not work with the latest versions of PyTorch (> 1.9.0)

Exact versions used: Python 3.7.13, PyTorch 1.9.0+cu111, NumPy 1.21.5, SciPy 1.7.3, Matplotlib 3.5.3, Seaborn 0.12.1, pandas 1.3.5

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