lambda

  • Available in: GLM, GAM

  • Hyperparameter: yes

Description

To get the best possible model, GLM and GAM need to find the optimal values of the regularization parameters \(\alpha\) and \(\lambda\). When performing regularization, penalties are introduced to the model buidling process to avoid overfitting, to reduce variance of the prediction error, and to handle correlated predictors. The two most common penalized models are ridge regression and LASSO (least absolute shrinkage and selection operator). The elastic net combines both penalties. These types of penalties are described in greater detail in the Regularization section in GLM for more information.

The lambda parameter controls the amount of regularization applied to the model. A non-negative value represents a shrinkage parameter, which multiplies \(P(\alpha, \beta)\) in the objective. The larger lambda is, the more the coefficients are shrunk toward zero (and each other). When the value is 0, regularization is disabled, and ordinary generalized liner models are fit. The default value for lambda is calculated by H2O using a heuristic based on the training data.

This option also works closely with the alpha parameter, which controls the distribution between the \(\ell_1\) (LASSO) and \(\ell_2\) (ridge regression) penalties. The following table describes the type of penalized model that results based on the values specifed for the lambda and alpha options.

lambda value

alpha value

Result

lambda == 0

alpha = any value

No regularization. alpha is ignored.

lambda > 0

alpha == 0

Ridge Regression

lambda > 0

alpha == 1

LASSO

lambda > 0

0 < alpha < 1

Elastic Net Penalty

Example

library(h2o)
h2o.init()
# import the airlines dataset:
# This dataset is used to classify whether a flight will be delayed 'YES' or not "NO"
# original data can be found at http://www.transtats.bts.gov/
airlines <-  h2o.importFile("http://s3.amazonaws.com/h2o-public-test-data/smalldata/airlines/allyears2k_headers.zip")

# convert columns to factors
airlines["Year"] <- as.factor(airlines["Year"])
airlines["Month"] <- as.factor(airlines["Month"])
airlines["DayOfWeek"] <- as.factor(airlines["DayOfWeek"])
airlines["Cancelled"] <- as.factor(airlines["Cancelled"])
airlines['FlightNum'] <- as.factor(airlines['FlightNum'])

# set the predictor names and the response column name
predictors <- c("Origin", "Dest", "Year", "UniqueCarrier", "DayOfWeek", "Month", "Distance", "FlightNum")
response <- "IsDepDelayed"

# split into train and validation
airlines_splits <- h2o.splitFrame(data =  airlines, ratios = 0.8)
train <- airlines_splits[[1]]
valid <- airlines_splits[[2]]

# try using the `lambda` parameter:
airlines_glm <- h2o.glm(family = 'binomial', x = predictors, y = response, training_frame = train,
                        validation_frame = valid, lambda = 0.0001)

# print the AUC for the validation data
print(h2o.auc(airlines_glm, valid = TRUE))

# Example of values to grid over for `lambda`
hyper_params <- list( lambda = c(1, 0.5, 0.1, 0.01, 0.001, 0.0001, 0.00001, 0) )

# this example uses cartesian grid search because the search space is small
# and we want to see the performance of all models. For a larger search space use
# random grid search instead: list(strategy = "RandomDiscrete")
grid <- h2o.grid(x = predictors, y = response, family = 'binomial', training_frame = train, validation_frame = valid,
                 algorithm = "glm", grid_id = "air_grid", hyper_params = hyper_params,
                 search_criteria = list(strategy = "Cartesian"))

## Sort the grid models by AUC
sorted_grid <- h2o.getGrid("air_grid", sort_by = "auc", decreasing = TRUE)
sorted_grid
import h2o
from h2o.estimators.glm import H2OGeneralizedLinearEstimator
h2o.init()

# import the airlines dataset:
# This dataset is used to classify whether a flight will be delayed 'YES' or not "NO"
# original data can be found at http://www.transtats.bts.gov/
airlines= h2o.import_file("https://s3.amazonaws.com/h2o-public-test-data/smalldata/airlines/allyears2k_headers.zip")

# convert columns to factors
airlines["Year"]= airlines["Year"].asfactor()
airlines["Month"]= airlines["Month"].asfactor()
airlines["DayOfWeek"] = airlines["DayOfWeek"].asfactor()
airlines["Cancelled"] = airlines["Cancelled"].asfactor()
airlines['FlightNum'] = airlines['FlightNum'].asfactor()

# set the predictor names and the response column name
predictors = ["Origin", "Dest", "Year", "UniqueCarrier", "DayOfWeek", "Month", "Distance", "FlightNum"]
response = "IsDepDelayed"

# split into train and validation sets
train, valid= airlines.split_frame(ratios = [.8])

# try using the `lambda_` parameter:
# initialize your estimator
airlines_glm = H2OGeneralizedLinearEstimator(family = 'binomial', lambda_ = .0001)

# then train your model
airlines_glm.train(x = predictors, y = response, training_frame = train, validation_frame = valid)

# print the auc for the validation data
print(airlines_glm.auc(valid=True))


# Example of values to grid over for `lambda`
# import Grid Search
from h2o.grid.grid_search import H2OGridSearch

# select the values for lambda_ to grid over
hyper_params = {'lambda': [1, 0.5, 0.1, 0.01, 0.001, 0.0001, 0.00001, 0]}

# this example uses cartesian grid search because the search space is small
# and we want to see the performance of all models. For a larger search space use
# random grid search instead: {'strategy': "RandomDiscrete"}
# initialize the glm estimator
airlines_glm_2 = H2OGeneralizedLinearEstimator(family = 'binomial')

# build grid search with previously made GLM and hyperparameters
grid = H2OGridSearch(model = airlines_glm_2, hyper_params = hyper_params,
                     search_criteria = {'strategy': "Cartesian"})

# train using the grid
grid.train(x = predictors, y = response, training_frame = train, validation_frame = valid)

# sort the grid models by decreasing AUC
sorted_grid = grid.get_grid(sort_by = 'auc', decreasing = True)
print(sorted_grid)