sgd

sgd is an R package for large scale estimation. It features many stochastic gradient methods, built-in models, visualization tools, automated hyperparameter tuning, model checking, interval estimation, and convergence diagnostics.

Features

At the core of the package is the function

sgd(formula, data, model, model.control, sgd.control)

It estimates parameters for a given data set and model using stochastic gradient descent. The optional arguments model.control and sgd.control specify attributes about the model and stochastic gradient method. Taking advantage of the bigmemory package, sgd also operates on data sets which are too large to fit in RAM as well as streaming data.

Example of large-scale linear regression:

library(sgd)

# Dimensions
N <- 1e5  # number of data points
d <- 1e2  # number of features

# Generate data.
X <- matrix(rnorm(N*d), ncol=d)
theta <- rep(5, d+1)
eps <- rnorm(N)
y <- cbind(1, X) %*% theta + eps
dat <- data.frame(y=y, x=X)

sgd.theta <- sgd(y ~ ., data=dat, model="lm")

Any loss function may be specified. For convenience the following are built-in: * Linear models * Generalized linear models * Method of moments * Generalized method of moments * Cox proportional hazards model * M-estimation

The following stochastic gradient methods exist: * (Standard) stochastic gradient descent * Implicit stochastic gradient descent * Averaged stochastic gradient descent * Averaged implicit stochastic gradient descent * Classical momentum * Nesterov’s accelerated gradient

Check out the vignette in vignettes/ or examples in demo/. In R, the equivalent commands are vignette(package="sgd") and demo(package="sgd").

Installation

To install the latest version from CRAN:

install.packages("sgd")

To install the latest development version from Github:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("airoldilab/sgd")

Authors

sgd is written by Dustin Tran and Panos Toulis, and is under active development. Please feel free to contribute by submitting any issues or requests—or by solving any current issues!

We thank all other members of the Airoldi Lab (led by Prof. Edo Airoldi) for their feedback and contributions.

Citation

@article{tran2015stochastic,
  author = {Tran, Dustin and Toulis, Panos and Airoldi, Edoardo M},
  title = {Stochastic gradient descent methods for estimation with large data sets},
  journal = {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.06459},
  year = {2015}
}