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Two-Class Logistic Regression

Important

Support for Machine Learning Studio (classic) will end on 31 August 2024. We recommend you transition to Azure Machine Learning by that date.

Beginning 1 December 2021, you will not be able to create new Machine Learning Studio (classic) resources. Through 31 August 2024, you can continue to use the existing Machine Learning Studio (classic) resources.

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Creates a two-class logistic regression model

Category: Machine Learning / Initialize Model / Classification

Note

Applies to: Machine Learning Studio (classic) only

Similar drag-and-drop modules are available in Azure Machine Learning designer.

Module overview

This article describes how to use the Two-Class Logistic Regression module in Machine Learning Studio (classic), to create a logistic regression model that can be used to predict two (and only two) outcomes.

Logistic regression is a well-known statistical technique that is used for modeling many kinds of problems. This algorithm is a supervised learning method; therefore, you must provide a dataset that already contains the outcomes to train the model.

More about logistic regression

Logistic regression is a well-known method in statistics that is used to predict the probability of an outcome, and is especially popular for classification tasks. The algorithm predicts the probability of occurrence of an event by fitting data to a logistic function. For details about this implementation, see the Technical Notes section.

In this module, the classification algorithm is optimized for dichotomous or binary variables. if you need to classify multiple outcomes, use the Multiclass Logistic Regression module.

How to configure Two-Class Logistic Regression

To train this model, you must provide a dataset that contains a label or class column. Because this module is intended for two-class problems, the label or class column must contain exactly two values.

For example, the label column might be [Voted] with possible values of "Yes" or "No". Or, it might be [Credit Risk], with possible values of "High" or "Low".

  1. Add the Two-Class Logistic Regression module to your experiment in Studio (classic).

  2. Specify how you want the model to be trained, by setting the Create trainer mode option.

    • Single Parameter: If you know how you want to configure the model, you can provide a specific set of values as arguments.

    • Parameter Range: If you are not sure of the best parameters, you can find the optimal parameters by specifying multiple values and using the Tune Model Hyperparameters module to find the optimal configuration. The trainer iterates over multiple combinations of the settings and determines the combination of values that produces the best model.

  3. For Optimization tolerance, specify a threshold value to use when optimizing the model. If the improvement between iterations falls below the specified threshold, the algorithm is considered to have converged on a solution, and training stops.

  4. For L1 regularization weight and L2 regularization weight, type a value to use for the regularization parameters L1 and L2. A non-zero value is recommended for both.

    Regularization is a method for preventing overfitting by penalizing models with extreme coefficient values. Regularization works by adding the penalty that is associated with coefficient values to the error of the hypothesis. Thus, an accurate model with extreme coefficient values would be penalized more, but a less accurate model with more conservative values would be penalized less.

    L1 and L2 regularization have different effects and uses.

    • L1 can be applied to sparse models, which is useful when working with high-dimensional data.

    • In contrast, L2 regularization is preferable for data that is not sparse.

    This algorithm supports a linear combination of L1 and L2 regularization values: that is, if x = L1 and y = L2, then ax + by = c defines the linear span of the regularization terms.

    Note

    Want to learn more about L1 and L2 regularization? The following article provides a discussion of how L1 and L2 regularization are different and how they affect model fitting, with code samples for logistic regression and neural network models: L1 and L2 Regularization for Machine Learning

    Different linear combinations of L1 and L2 terms have been devised for logistic regression models: for example, elastic net regularization. We suggest that you reference these combinations to define a linear combination that is effective in your model.

  5. For Memory size for L-BFGS, specify the amount of memory to use for L-BFGS optimization.

    L-BFGS stands for "limited memory Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno". It is an optimization algorithm that is popular for parameter estimation. This parameter indicates the number of past positions and gradients to store for the computation of the next step.

    This optimization parameter limits the amount of memory that is used to compute the next step and direction. When you specify less memory, training is faster but less accurate.

  6. For Random number seed, type an integer value. Defining a seed value is important if you want the results to be reproducible over multiple runs of the same experiment.

  7. Select the Allow unknown categorical levels option to create an additional “unknown” level in each categorical column. If you do so, any values (levels) in the test dataset that are not available in the training dataset are mapped to this "unknown" level.

  8. Add a tagged dataset to the experiment, and connect one of the training modules.

    Note

    If you pass a parameter range to Train Model, it will use only the first value in the parameter range list.

    If you pass a single set of parameter values to the Tune Model Hyperparameters module, when it expects a range of settings for each parameter, it ignores the values and using the default values for the learner.

    If you select the Parameter Range option and enter a single value for any parameter, that single value you specified will be used throughout the sweep, even if other parameters change across a range of values.

  9. Run the experiment.

Results

After training is complete:

  • To see a summary of the model's parameters, together with the feature weights learned from training, right-click the output of Train Model or Tune Model Hyperparameters, and select Visualize.

  • To make predictions on new data, use the trained model and new data as input to the Score Model module.

  • To perform cross-validation against a labeled data set, connect the data and the untrained model to Cross-Validate Model.

Examples

For examples of how this learning algorithm is used, see the Azure AI Gallery:

Technical notes

This section contains implementation details, tips, and answers to frequently asked questions.

Usage tips

Logistic regression requires numeric variables. Therefore, when you use categorical columns as variable, Machine Learning converts the values to an indicator array internally.

For dates and times, a numeric representation is used. (For more information about date time values, see DateTime Structure (.NET Framework) - Remarks.) If you want to handle dates and times differently we suggest that you create a derived column.

Implementation details

Logistic regression assumes a logistic distribution of the data, where the probability that an example belongs to class 1 is the formula:

p(x;β0,…, βD-1)

Where:

  • x is a D-dimensional vector containing the values of all the features of the instance.

  • p is the logistic distribution function.

  • β{0},..., β {D-1} are the unknown parameters of the logistic distribution.

The algorithm tries to find the optimal values for β{0},..., β {D-1} by maximizing the log probability of the parameters given the inputs. Maximization is performed by using a popular method for parameter estimation, called Limited Memory BFGS.

Research

For more information on the implementation of this algorithm, see Scalable Training of L-1 Regularized Log-Linear Models, by Andrew and Gao.

Module parameters

Name Range Type Default Description
Optimization tolerance >=double.Epsilon Float 0.0000001 Specify a tolerance value for the L-BFGS optimizer
L1 regularization weight >=0.0 Float 1.0 Specify the L1 regularization weight
L2 regularization weight >=0.0 Float 1.0 Specify the L2 regularization weight
Memory size for L-BFGS >=1 Integer 20 Specify the amount of memory (in MB) to use for the L-BFGS optimizer
Random number seed Any Integer Type a value to seed the random number generator used by the model. Leave it blank for the default.
Allow unknown categorical levels Any Boolean True Indicate whether an additional level should be created for each categorical column. Any levels in the test dataset that are not available in the training dataset are mapped to this additional level.

Output

Name Type Description
Untrained model ILearner interface An untrained classification model

See also

Classification

Multiclass Logistic Regression

A-Z Module List