The motivation for this package is to provide functions which help with the development and tuning of machine learning models in biomedical data where the sample size is frequently limited, but the number of predictors may be significantly larger (P >> n). While most machine learning pipelines involve splitting data into training and testing cohorts, typically 2/3 and 1/3 respectively, medical datasets may be too small for this, and so determination of accuracy in the left-out test set suffers because the test set is small. Nested cross-validation (CV) provides a way to get round this, by maximising use of the whole dataset for testing overall accuracy, while maintaining the split between training and testing.
In addition typical biomedical datasets often have many 10,000s of possible predictors, so filtering of predictors is commonly needed. However, it has been demonstrated that filtering on the whole dataset creates a bias when determining accuracy of models (Vabalas et al, 2019). Feature selection of predictors should be considered an integral part of a model, with feature selection performed only on training data. Then the selected features and accompanying model can be tested on hold-out test data without bias. Thus, it is recommended that any filtering of predictors is performed within the CV loops, to prevent test data information leakage.
This package enables nested cross-validation (CV) to be performed
using the commonly used glmnet
package, which fits elastic
net regression models, and the caret
package, which is a
general framework for fitting a large number of machine learning models.
In addition, nestedcv
adds functionality to enable
cross-validation of the elastic net alpha parameter when fitting
glmnet
models.
nestedcv
partitions the dataset into outer and inner
folds (default 10 x 10 folds). The inner fold CV, (default is 10-fold),
is used to tune optimal hyperparameters for models. Then the model is
fitted on the whole inner fold and tested on the left-out data from the
outer fold. This is repeated across all outer folds (default 10 outer
folds), and the unseen test predictions from the outer folds are
compared against the true results for the outer test folds and the
results concatenated, to give measures of accuracy (e.g. AUC and
accuracy for classification, or RMSE for regression) across the whole
dataset.
A final round of CV is performed on the whole dataset to determine hyperparameters to fit the final model to the whole data, which can be used for prediction with external data.
While some models such as glmnet
allow for sparsity and
have variable selection built-in, many models fail to fit when given
massive numbers of predictors, or perform poorly due to overfitting
without variable selection. In addition, in medicine one of the goals of
predictive modelling is commonly the development of diagnostic or
biomarker tests, for which reducing the number of predictors is
typically a practical necessity.
Several filter functions (t-test, Wilcoxon test, anova,
Pearson/Spearman correlation, random forest variable importance, and
ReliefF from the CORElearn
package) for feature selection
are provided, and can be embedded within the outer loop of the nested
CV.
install.packages("nestedcv")
library(nestedcv)
The following simulated example demonstrates the bias intrinsic to datasets where P >> n when applying filtering of predictors to the whole dataset rather than to training folds.
## Example binary classification problem with P >> n
x <- matrix(rnorm(150 * 2e+04), 150, 2e+04) # predictors
y <- factor(rbinom(150, 1, 0.5)) # binary response
## Partition data into 2/3 training set, 1/3 test set
trainSet <- caret::createDataPartition(y, p = 0.66, list = FALSE)
## t-test filter using whole test set
filt <- ttest_filter(y, x, nfilter = 100)
filx <- x[, filt]
## Train glmnet on training set only using filtered predictor matrix
library(glmnet)
## Loading required package: Matrix
## Loaded glmnet 4.1-8
fit <- cv.glmnet(filx[trainSet, ], y[trainSet], family = "binomial")
## Predict response on test set
predy <- predict(fit, newx = filx[-trainSet, ], s = "lambda.min", type = "class")
predy <- as.vector(predy)
predyp <- predict(fit, newx = filx[-trainSet, ], s = "lambda.min", type = "response")
predyp <- as.vector(predyp)
output <- data.frame(testy = y[-trainSet], predy = predy, predyp = predyp)
## Results on test set
## shows bias since univariate filtering was applied to whole dataset
predSummary(output)
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 21 3
## 1 3 23
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.9327 0.8800 0.8798
## Nested CV
fit2 <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 7:10 / 10,
filterFUN = ttest_filter,
filter_options = list(nfilter = 100))
fit2
## Nested cross-validation with glmnet
## Filter: ttest_filter
##
## Final parameters:
## lambda alpha
## 0.000134 0.700000
##
## Final coefficients:
## (Intercept) V19583 V10235 V18767 V15040 V2810
## 0.54417 -1.12955 1.07773 1.04470 -0.93285 -0.91779
## V15563 V16357 V8713 V17561 V7235 V6842
## -0.91047 -0.87128 0.83231 0.80264 -0.80175 -0.78071
## V2583 V2389 V6657 V18942 V17139 V13049
## -0.75805 -0.72744 0.71658 0.70005 -0.69589 0.67341
## V17506 V9349 V14745 V10960 V15981 V11725
## 0.66658 -0.66383 0.66304 -0.66170 -0.66160 0.63766
## V14211 V9122 V8130 V15046 V8766 V12289
## -0.63109 -0.61695 -0.58749 0.55648 -0.55578 -0.54262
## V7175 V13311 V18904 V159 V18451 V8567
## -0.53899 -0.53711 -0.52282 -0.50498 0.50383 -0.50110
## V11255 V12980 V17085 V6872 V11489 V19010
## 0.48472 -0.47895 0.44595 0.44090 -0.38280 -0.37894
## V17213 V12162 V12199 V2953 V8288 V9036
## -0.37002 0.34370 -0.33035 0.32582 -0.31367 0.30640
## V11937 V19259 V11406 V16629 V16858 V9860
## 0.29887 -0.29701 -0.27376 -0.26593 -0.26362 -0.25490
## V2823 V8726 V11667 V13770 V5851 V1101
## -0.24259 0.23690 -0.22467 -0.21823 0.21608 0.21401
## V8236 V1524 V133 V14987 V6530 V2854
## -0.19900 0.18288 0.17236 0.16616 -0.16322 -0.14418
## V17283 V8217 V3435 V15048 V5348 V14800
## -0.11862 -0.11170 0.10529 0.10172 0.09143 0.08681
## V5354 V19564 V7438 V9789 V13970 V9505
## -0.08265 -0.07764 0.07651 -0.07013 -0.06825 0.05871
## V15315 V17455 V17145
## -0.05273 0.02718 -0.02508
##
## Result:
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 31 46
## 1 42 31
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.4095 0.4133 0.4136
testroc <- pROC::roc(output$testy, output$predyp, direction = "<", quiet = TRUE)
inroc <- innercv_roc(fit2)
plot(fit2$roc)
lines(inroc, col = 'blue')
lines(testroc, col = 'red')
legend('bottomright', legend = c("Nested CV", "Left-out inner CV folds",
"Test partition, non-nested filtering"),
col = c("black", "blue", "red"), lty = 1, lwd = 2, bty = "n")
In this example the dataset is pure noise. Filtering of predictors on the whole dataset is a source of leakage of information about the test set, leading to substantially overoptimistic performance on the test set as measured by ROC AUC.
Figures A & B below show two commonly used, but biased methods in which cross-validation is used to fit models, but the result is a biased estimate of model performance. In scheme A, there is no hold-out test set at all, so there are two sources of bias/ data leakage: first, the filtering on the whole dataset, and second, the use of left-out CV folds for measuring performance. Left-out CV folds are known to lead to biased estimates of performance as the tuning parameters are ‘learnt’ from optimising the result on the left-out CV fold.
In scheme B, the CV is used to tune parameters and a hold-out set is used to measure performance, but information leakage occurs when filtering is applied to the whole dataset. Unfortunately this is commonly observed in many studies which apply differential expression analysis on the whole dataset to select predictors which are then passed to machine learning algorithms.
Figures C & D below show two valid methods for fitting a model with CV for tuning parameters as well as unbiased estimates of model performance. Figure C is a traditional hold-out test set, with the dataset partitioned 2/3 training, 1/3 test. Notably the critical difference between scheme B above, is that the filtering is only done on the training set and not on the whole dataset.
Figure D shows the scheme for fully nested cross-validation. Note that filtering is applied to each outer CV training fold. The key advantage of nested CV is that outer CV test folds are collated to give an improved estimate of performance compared to scheme C since the numbers for total testing are larger.
In the real life example below, RNA-Sequencing gene expression data from synovial biopsies from patients with rheumatoid arthritis in the R4RA randomised clinical trial (Humby et al, 2021) is used to predict clinical response to the biologic drug rituximab. Treatment response is determined by a clinical measure, namely Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) 50% response, which has a binary outcome: treatment success or failure (response or non-response). This dataset contains gene expression on over 50,000 genes in arthritic synovial tissue from 133 individuals, who were randomised to two drugs (rituximab and tocilizumab). First, we remove genes of low expression using a median cut-off (this still leaves >16,000 genes), and we subset the dataset to the rituximab treated individuals (n=68).
# Raw RNA-Seq data for this example is located at:
# https://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/experiments/E-MTAB-11611/
# set up data
load("/../R4RA_270821.RData")
index <- r4ra.meta$Outliers_Detected_On_PCA != "outlier" & r4ra.meta$Visit == 3 &
!is.na(r4ra.meta$Visit)
metadata <- r4ra.meta[index, ]
dim(metadata) # 133 individuals
medians <- Rfast::rowMedians(as.matrix(r4ra.vst))
data <- t(as.matrix(r4ra.vst))
# remove low expressed genes
data <- data[index, medians > 6]
dim(data) # 16254 genes
# Rituximab cohort only
yrtx <- metadata$CDAI.response.status.V7[metadata$Randomised.medication == "Rituximab"]
yrtx <- factor(yrtx)
data.rtx <- data[metadata$Randomised.medication == "Rituximab", ]
# no filter
res.rtx <- nestcv.glmnet(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx,
family = "binomial", cv.cores = 8,
alphaSet = seq(0.7, 1, 0.05))
res.rtx
## Nested cross-validation with glmnet
## No filter
##
## Final parameters:
## lambda alpha
## 0.1511 0.7950
##
## Final coefficients:
## (Intercept) AC016582.3 PCBP3 TMEM170B EIF4E3 SEC14L6 CEP85 APLF
## 0.8898659 -0.2676580 -0.2667770 0.2456329 0.2042326 -0.1992225 0.1076051 -0.1072684
## EARS2 PTK7 EFNA5 MEST IQANK1 MTATP6P1 GSK3B STK40
## -0.1036846 -0.0919594 -0.0882686 0.0769173 -0.0708992 0.0545392 0.0469272 0.0316988
## SUV39H2 AC005670.2 ZNF773 XIST STAU2 DIRAS3
## 0.0297370 0.0184851 -0.0170861 -0.0100934 0.0016182 -0.0009975
##
## Result:
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.7648 0.7059 0.6773
Use summary()
to see full information from the nested
model fitting. coef()
can be used to show the coefficients
of the final fitted model. For comparison, performance metrics from the
left-out inner CV test folds can be viewed using
innercv_summary()
. Performance metrics on the outer
training folds can be viewed with train_summary()
, provided
the argument outer_train_predict
was set to
TRUE
in the original call to either
nestcv.glmnet()
, nestcv.train()
or
outercv()
.
Filters can be used by setting the filterFUN
argument.
Options for the filter function are passed as a list through
filter_options
.
# t-test filter
res.rtx <- nestcv.glmnet(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx, filterFUN = ttest_filter,
filter_options = list(nfilter = 300, p_cutoff = NULL),
family = "binomial", cv.cores = 8,
alphaSet = seq(0.7, 1, 0.05))
summary(res.rtx)
Output from the nested CV with glmnet can be plotted to show how deviance is affected by alpha and lambda.
plot_alphas(res.rtx)
plot_lambdas(res.rtx)
The tuning of alpha for each outer fold can be plotted.
# Fold 1 line plot
plot(res.rtx$outer_result[[1]]$cvafit)
# Scatter plot
plot(res.rtx$outer_result[[1]]$cvafit, type = 'p')
# Number of non-zero coefficients
plot(res.rtx$outer_result[[1]]$cvafit, xaxis = 'nvar')
ROC curves from left-out folds from both outer and inner CV can be plotted. Note that the AUC based on the left-out outer folds is the unbiased estimate of accuracy, while the left-out inner folds demonstrate bias due to the optimisation of the model’s hyperparameters on the inner fold data.
# Outer CV ROC
plot(res.rtx$roc, main = "Outer fold ROC", font.main = 1, col = 'blue')
legend("bottomright", legend = paste0("AUC = ", signif(pROC::auc(res.rtx$roc), 3)), bty = 'n')
# Inner CV ROC
rtx.inroc <- innercv_roc(res.rtx)
plot(rtx.inroc, main = "Inner fold ROC", font.main = 1, col = 'red')
legend("bottomright", legend = paste0("AUC = ", signif(pROC::auc(rtx.inroc), 3)), bty = 'n')
Leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) can be performed on the outer folds.
# Outer LOOCV
res.rtx <- nestcv.glmnet(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx, min_1se = 0, filterFUN = ttest_filter,
filter_options = list(nfilter = 300, p_cutoff = NULL),
outer_method = "LOOCV",
family = "binomial", cv.cores = 8,
alphaSet = seq(0.7, 1, 0.05))
summary(res.rtx)
glmnet
and some caret models (e.g. SVM) can only accept
a numeric matrix of predictors. Dataframes of predictors with factors or
character variables can be converted to a matrix using one-hot encoding
to create dummy variables using the function one_hot()
. For
nestcv.glmnet
models, one_hot()
should be used
with the argument all_levels = FALSE
to avoid the predictor
matrix not being full rank.
Multiple filters for variable reduction are available including:
ttest_filter |
t-test |
wilcoxon_filter |
Wilcoxon (Mann-Whitney) test |
anova_filter |
one-way ANOVA |
correl_filter |
Pearson or Spearman correlation for regression modelling |
lm_filter |
linear model with covariates |
rf_filter |
random forest variable importance using randomForest package |
ranger_filter |
random forest variable importance using ranger package |
relieff_filter |
ReliefF and other methods available via CORElearn |
glmnet_filter |
uses sparsity of elastic net regression using glmnet to restrict variables |
pls_filter |
partial least squares regression filter using pls package |
boruta_filter |
Boruta |
stat_filter |
A swiss army knife univariate statistical filter for mixed data with combined continuous & categorical data |
# Random forest filter
res.rtx <- nestcv.glmnet(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx, min_1se = 0.5, filterFUN = rf_filter,
filter_options = list(nfilter = 300),
family = "binomial", cv.cores = 8,
alphaSet = seq(0.7, 1, 0.05))
summary(res.rtx)
# ReliefF algorithm filter
res.rtx <- nestcv.glmnet(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx, min_1se = 0, filterFUN = relieff_filter,
filter_options = list(nfilter = 300),
family = "binomial", cv.cores = 8,
alphaSet = seq(0.7, 1, 0.05))
summary(res.rtx)
Bootstrapped versions of the univariate filters are available [see
boot_ttest()
]. These use repeated random sampling to try to
improve stability of ranking of predictors based on univariate
statistics.
stat_filter()
is a swiss army knife filter which can
handle dataframes with mixed data with combined continuous &
categorical predictors. It uses different univariate statistics
dependent on data type. For example, t-test is used for binary outcome
with continuous predictors; correlation or linear regression for
continuous outcome with continuous predictors etc. It can also be used
to quickly generate summary statistics relating predictors to the
response variable.
library(mlbench)
data(BostonHousing2)
dat <- BostonHousing2
y <- dat$cmedv ## continuous outcome
x <- subset(dat, select = -c(cmedv, medv, town))
stat_filter(y, x, type = "full")
## r pvalue
## tract 0.428251535 5.514616e-24
## lon -0.322946685 9.548359e-14
## lat 0.006825792 8.782686e-01
## crim -0.389582441 8.711542e-20
## zn 0.360386177 5.785518e-17
## indus -0.484754379 3.522132e-31
## chas 0.175662571 7.109514e-05
## nox -0.429300219 4.167568e-24
## rm 0.696303794 1.307493e-74
## age -0.377998896 1.241939e-18
## dis 0.249314834 1.313250e-08
## rad -0.384765552 2.664184e-19
## tax -0.471978807 1.963250e-29
## ptratio -0.505654619 3.362511e-34
## b 0.334860832 1.006748e-14
## lstat -0.740835993 3.731519e-89
It is fairly straightforward to create your own custom filter, which
can be embedded within the outer CV loops via
nestcv.glmnet
, nestcv.train
or
outercv
. The function simply must be of the form
filter <- function(y, x, ...) {}
Other arguments can be passed in to the filter function as a named
list via the filter_options
argument. The function must
return a vector of indices of those predictors in x
which
are to be retained for downstream model fitting as well as prediction on
left-out outer folds. Importantly the filter function is applied
independently to each outer CV fold and not run on the whole data.
Finally once the model performance has been calculated by nested CV. The filter is applied to the whole dataset when refitting the final model to the full dataset.
The argument modifyX
can be used to pass a function for
imputing missing values in the predictor variables in x
.
This can be done either with or without knowledge of the outcome
variable y
by setting argument modifyX_useY
.
If modifyX_useY = FALSE
, then the x
modifying
function must simply return an updated x
. For example the
missRanger
package uses random forest to impute missing
values. It does this without knowledge of y
. Thus
imputation of missing values is performed in train and test outer folds
independently.
# this example requires the missRanger package
library(missRanger)
x_na <- generateNA(x) # insert NA into x
x_na <- as.matrix(x_na)
# missRanger requires a dataframe, whereas glmnet requires a matrix
impute_x <- function(x, ...) {
missRanger(as.data.frame(x), num.trees = 50, ...)
}
res <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x_na, family = "gaussian",
alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 3, cv.cores = 2,
modifyX = impute_x,
na.option = "pass")
If modifyX_useY = TRUE
, this allows the use of
predict()
which can enable attributes to be learned from
the training part of x
and then applied to the test data
without prior knowledge of the test data. At the same time it is
possible to pass the training part of the outcome variable
y
to the modifying function. The modifying function must
return a model type object with a set class for which a
predict()
function of that class exists. Internally, the
function specified by modifyX
is called and passed the
outer CV training parts of y
and x
ensuring
that the test folds are hidden. In the toy example below, the training
part of y
is passed into the function, but is not used and
all that is done is to scale the predictors based only on the training
folds.
# receives training data from `x` and `y` only
# returns object with class 'modxy'
modxy <- function(y, x) {
sc <- scale(x)
cen <- attr(sc, "scaled:center")
sca <- attr(sc, "scaled:scale")
out <- cbind(cen, sca)
class(out) <- "modxy"
out
}
# define predict function for class 'modxy'
# applied independently to train and test folds of `x`
predict.modxy <- function(object, newdata, ...) {
scale(newdata, center = object[,1], scale = object[,2])
}
res <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "gaussian", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 3, cv.cores = 3,
modifyX = modxy, modifyX_useY = TRUE)
The predict()
part of the modifyX
function
can completely alter x
, for example adding additional
columns with interactions or other manipulations, or removing
unnecessary columns. nestedcv
does check that the column
names are identical in both train and test folds after this process.
Throughout the process train and test outer CV folds are kept
separate.
Class imbalance is known to impact on model fitting for certain model types, e.g. random forest, SVM. Models may tend to aim to predict the majority class and ignore the minority class since selecting the majority class can give high accuracy purely by chance. While performance measures such as balanced accuracy can give improved estimates of model performance, techniques for rebalancing data have been developed. These include:
These are available within nestedcv
using the
balance
argument to specify a balancing function. Other
arguments to control the balancing process are passed to the function as
a list via balance_options
.
randomsample |
Random oversampling of the minority class and/or undersampling of the majority class |
smote |
Synthetic minority oversampling technique (SMOTE) |
Note that in nestedcv
balancing is performed only on the
outer training folds, immediately prior to filtering of features. This
is important as balancing the whole dataset prior to the outer CV leads
to data leakage of outer CV hold-out samples into the outer training
folds.
The number of samples in each class in the outer CV folds can be
checked on nestedcv
objects using the function
class_balance()
.
For logistic regression methods like glmnet, balancing may actually be deleterious. Using weights to apply increased weight to minority samples is typically preferred as a method for improving model fitting.
The following example simulates an imbalanced dataset with 150 samples and 20,000 predictors of which only the first 30 are weak predictors.
## Imbalanced dataset
set.seed(1, "L'Ecuyer-CMRG")
x <- matrix(rnorm(150 * 2e+04), 150, 2e+04) # predictors
y <- factor(rbinom(150, 1, 0.2)) # imbalanced binary response
table(y)
## y
## 0 1
## 116 34
## first 30 parameters are weak predictors
x[, 1:30] <- rnorm(150 * 30, 0, 1) + as.numeric(y)*0.7
Here we illustrate the use of randomsample()
to balance
x & y outside of the CV loop by random oversampling
minority group. Then we fit a nested CV glmnet model on the balanced
data.
out <- randomsample(y, x)
y2 <- out$y
x2 <- out$x
table(y2)
## y2
## 0 1
## 116 116
## Nested CV glmnet with unnested balancing by random oversampling on
## whole dataset
fit1 <- nestcv.glmnet(y2, x2, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4,
cv.cores=2,
filterFUN = ttest_filter)
fit1$summary
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 113 9
## 1 3 107
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.9718 0.9483 0.9483
Alternatively choices for dealing with imbalance include balancing x & y outside of CV loop by random oversampling minority group, or by SMOTE.
out <- randomsample(y, x, minor=1, major=0.4)
y2 <- out$y
x2 <- out$x
table(y2)
## y2
## 0 1
## 46 34
## Nested CV glmnet with unnested balancing by random undersampling on
## whole dataset
fit1b <- nestcv.glmnet(y2, x2, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4,
cv.cores=2,
filterFUN = ttest_filter)
fit1b$summary
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 42 23
## 1 4 11
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.7331 0.6625 0.6183
## Balance x & y outside of CV loop by SMOTE
out <- smote(y, x)
y2 <- out$y
x2 <- out$x
table(y2)
## y2
## 0 1
## 116 116
## Nested CV glmnet with unnested balancing by SMOTE on whole dataset
fit2 <- nestcv.glmnet(y2, x2, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4,
cv.cores=2,
filterFUN = ttest_filter)
fit2$summary
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 111 1
## 1 5 115
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.9959 0.9741 0.9741
Finally, we show full nesting of both sample balancing and feature
filtering within the outer CV loop, using
nestcv.glmnet()
.
## Nested CV glmnet with nested balancing by random oversampling
fit3 <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4,
cv.cores=2,
balance = "randomsample",
filterFUN = ttest_filter)
fit3$summary
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 111 19
## 1 5 15
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.8251 0.8400 0.6990
For regression, an alternative method is to use weights. Increasing
the weight of the minority class can improve performance. A simple
function weight()
is provided which increases weight for
minority samples to give equal balance across classes according to their
overall proportions. This function works for both binary and multiclass
classification.
## Nested CV glmnet with weights
w <- weight(y)
table(w)
## w
## 0.646551724137931 2.20588235294118
## 116 34
fit4 <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4,
cv.cores=2,
weights = w,
filterFUN = ttest_filter)
fit4$summary
## Reference
## Predicted 0 1
## 0 111 15
## 1 5 19
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy
## 0.8524 0.8667 0.7579
Finally we plot ROC curves to illustrate the differences between these approaches.
plot(fit1$roc, col='green')
lines(fit1b$roc, col='red')
lines(fit2$roc, col='blue')
lines(fit3$roc)
lines(fit4$roc, col='purple')
legend('bottomright', legend = c("Unnested random oversampling",
"Unnested SMOTE",
"Unnested random undersampling",
"Nested random oversampling",
"Nested glmnet with weights"),
col = c("green", "blue", "red", "black", "purple"), lty = 1, lwd = 2, bty = "n", cex=0.8)
This shows that unnested oversampling and unnested SMOTE leads to a data leak resulting in upward bias in apparent performance. The correct unbiased estimate of performance is ‘nested random oversampling’. Interestingly unnested random undersampling does not lead to any leakage of samples into left-out test folds, but the reduction in data size means that training is adversely affected and performance of the trained models is poor.
A custom balancing function can be provided. The function must be of the form:
balance <- function(y, x, ...) {
return(list(y = y, x = x))
}
Other arguments can be passed in to the balance function as a named
list via the balance_options
argument. The function must
return a list containing y
an expanded/altered response
vector and x
the matrix or dataframe of predictors with
increased/decreased samples in rows and predictors in columns.
Nested CV can also be performed using the caret
package
framework written by Max Kuhn (https://topepo.github.io/caret/index.html). This enables
access to the large library of machine learning models available within
caret.
Here we use caret
for tuning the alpha and lambda
parameters of glmnet
.
# nested CV using caret
tg <- expand.grid(lambda = exp(seq(log(2e-3), log(1e0), length.out = 100)),
alpha = seq(0.8, 1, 0.1))
ncv <- nestcv.train(y = yrtx, x = data.rtx,
method = "glmnet",
savePredictions = "final",
filterFUN = ttest_filter, filter_options = list(nfilter = 300),
tuneGrid = tg, cv.cores = 8)
ncv$summary
# Plot ROC on outer folds
plot(ncv$roc)
# Plot ROC on inner LO folds
inroc <- innercv_roc(ncv)
plot(inroc)
pROC::auc(inroc)
# Extract coefficients of final fitted model
glmnet_coefs(ncv$final_fit$finalModel, s = ncv$finalTune$lambda)
It is important to try calls to nestcv.train
with
cv.cores=1
first. With caret
this may flag up
that specific packages are not installed or that there are problems with
input variables y
and x
which may have to be
corrected for the call to run in multicore mode. Once it is clear that
the call to nestcv.train
is working ok, you can quit single
core execution and restart in multicore mode.
It is important to realise that the train()
function in
caret
sets a parameter known as tuneLength
to
3 by default, so the default tuning grid is minimal.
tuneLength
can easily be increased to give a tuning grid of
greater granularity. Tuneable parameters for individual models can be
inspected using modelLookup()
, while
getModelInfo()
gives further information.
When fitting classification models, the usual default metric for
tuning model hyperparameters in caret
is Accuracy. However,
with small datasets, accuracy is disproportionately affected by changes
in a single individual’s prediction outcome from incorrect to correctly
classified or vice versa. For this reason, we suggest using logLoss with
smaller datasets as it provides more stable measures of model tuning
behaviour. In nestedcv
, when fitting classification models
with caret
, the default metric is changed to use
logLoss.
We recommend that the results of tuning are plotted to understand whether parameters have a systematic effect on model accuracy. With small datasets tuning may pick parameters partially at random because of random fluctuations in measured accuracy during tuning, which may worsen noise surrounding performance than if they were fixed.
# Example tuning plot for outer fold 1
plot(ncv$outer_result[[1]]$fit, xTrans = log)
# ggplot2 version
ggplot(ncv$outer_result[[1]]$fit) +
scale_x_log10()
By default nestedcv
stratifies outer & inner CV
folds based on the outcome variable using caret’s
createFolds()
function. Users can control CV folds directly
by providing their own lists of fold indices. Outer CV fold indices can
simply be provided via the argument outer_folds
to
nestcv.glmnet()
or nestcv.train()
. This is a
list of vectors with one vector of indices used for each test CV
fold.
The inner CV fold indices can also be controlled via the
inner_folds
argument. This is a list of a list of vectors.
This can be useful if control of stratification is desired. The toy
example below demonstrates how the outer_folds
and
inner_folds
objects have to be structured.
data(iris)
y <- iris$Species
x <- iris[, -5]
out_folds <- caret::createFolds(y, k = 8)
in_folds <- lapply(out_folds, function(i) {
train_y <- y[-i]
caret::createFolds(train_y, k = 8)
})
res <- nestcv.train(y, x, method = "rf",
cv.cores = 8,
inner_folds = in_folds,
outer_folds = out_folds)
summary(res)
res$outer_folds # show which outer fold indices were used
In this example the outcome variable y
has been used to
stratify the folds for both outer and inner CV for 8 x 8 nested CV. But
it could easily be replaced with a variable from the predictor dataframe
if stratification by an imbalanced group is desired. For grouped data
where members of a group must be kept together try using caret’s
groupKFold()
function. For stratification with multiple
columns (e.g. response + one or more grouping variables), try
multi_strata()
from the splitTools
package.
See the accompanying vignette “Using outercv with Bayesian shrinkage models”.
For classification models, the function metrics()
can be
used to obtain additional performance metrics including area under
precision-recall curve, Cohen’s kappa, F1 score and Matthews correlation
coefficient. For binary classification, some of these vary depending on
which category is considered the positive or relevant class. The default
setting is that factors are ordered as ‘controls’ then ‘cases’ (factor
level 1 then 2). Setting the argument positive = 1
or to
the character value of the positive factor level alters which factor
level is considered positive or relevant. Cohen’s kappa, F1 macro score
and Matthews correlation coefficient are also available for multi-class
classification.
library(mlbench)
data(Sonar)
y <- Sonar$Class
x <- Sonar[, -61]
fit1 <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4, cv.cores = 2)
metrics(fit1, extra = TRUE)
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy PR.AUC
## 0.8254853 0.7596154 0.7559209 0.7940713
## Kappa F1 MCC nvar
## 0.5145178 0.7311828 0.5160771 17.0000000
While ROC curve objects are generated automatically for binary
models, precision-recall curves can be quickly generated for
nestedcv
models using the convenience function
prc()
which employs the package ROCR.
fit1$prc <- prc(fit1)
# precision-recall AUC values
fit1$prc$auc
## [1] 0.7940713
# plot ROC and PR curves
op <- par(mfrow = c(1, 2), mar = c(4, 4, 2, 2) +.1)
plot(fit1$roc, col = "red", main = "ROC", las = 1)
plot(fit1$prc, col = "red", main = "Precision-recall")
par(op)
For all of the nestedcv
model training functions
described above, predictions on new data can be made by referencing the
final fitted object which is fitted to the whole dataset.
# for nestcv.glmnet object
preds <- predict(res.rtx, newdata = data.rtx, type = 'response')
# for nestcv.train object
preds <- predict(ncv, newdata = data.rtx)
The main commands nestcv.glmnet()
,
nestcv.train()
, nestcv.SuperLearner()
and
outercv()
perform nested CV once, giving an estimate of
performance from the outer CV folds across the whole data. Repeating
this process many times, which is called ‘repeated nested CV’, gives a
more accurate overall estimate of performance. This can be performed by
piping a call to one of the above nestedcv
model functions
to repeatcv()
using the pipe |>
(the
standard magrittr pipe %>%
will not work).
data(Sonar)
y <- Sonar$Class
x <- Sonar[, -61]
# single fit
fit <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4, cv.cores = 2)
# repeated nested CV
set.seed(123, "L'Ecuyer-CMRG")
repcv <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4) |>
repeatcv(8, rep.cores = 2)
repcv
## Call:
## nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1, n_outer_folds = 4)
##
## AUC Accuracy Balanced accuracy nvar
## 1 0.8205 0.7692 0.7675 20
## 2 0.8197 0.7452 0.7450 20
## 3 0.8210 0.7596 0.7592 20
## 4 0.8226 0.7885 0.7842 24
## 5 0.8129 0.7452 0.7450 18
## 6 0.8207 0.7500 0.7495 26
## 7 0.8264 0.7644 0.7624 22
## 8 0.8208 0.7308 0.7295 17
summary(repcv)
## Call:
## nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1, n_outer_folds = 4)
## 8 repeats
## mean sd sem
## AUC 0.8206 0.003731 0.001319
## Accuracy 0.7566 0.017793 0.006291
## Balanced accuracy 0.7553 0.016739 0.005918
## nvar 20.8750 2.997022 1.059607
If you are using repeated nested CV to compare performance between
models, it is recommended to fix the sets of outer CV folds used across
each repeat. The function repeatfolds()
can be used to
create a fixed set of outer CV folds for each repeat.
folds <- repeatfolds(y, repeats = 3, n_outer_folds = 4)
repcv <- nestcv.glmnet(y, x, family = "binomial", alphaSet = 1,
n_outer_folds = 4) |>
repeatcv(3, repeat_folds = folds, rep.cores = 2)
repcv
repeatcv()
applied to binary nestedcv
models will store a pROC
object which concatenates all of
the test fold predictions across all repeats. This can be easily plotted
and shows a smoother ROC curve compared to the ROC curve from a single
model.
Similarly, a more refined precision-recall curve can also be generated from the repeated nested CV predictions.
op <- par(mfrow = c(1, 2), mar = c(4, 4, 2, 2) +.1)
plot(fit1$roc, col = "red", las = 1, main = "ROC") # single nested cv
lines(repcv$roc) # repeated nested cv
repcv$prc <- prc(repcv) # calculate precision-recall curve
plot(fit1$prc, col = "red", main = "Precision-recall") # single nested cv
lines(repcv$prc) # repeated nested cv
legend("topright", legend = c("single nested cv", "repeat nested cv"),
col = c("red", "black"), lwd = 2, bty = "n")
par(op)
Repeated nested CV is computationally intensive and very time consuming. We strongly recommend that these calls fully exploit parallelisation as explained below.
Currently nestcv.glmnet
, nestcv.train
,
nestcv.SuperLearner
and outercv
all allow
parallelisation of the outer CV loop using mclapply
from
the parallel
package on unix/mac and parLapply
on windows. This is enabled by specifying the number of cores using the
argument cv.cores
. Since in some cases the filtering
process can be time consuming (e.g. rf_filter
,
relieff_filter
), we tend to recommend parallelisation of
the outer CV loop over parallelisation of the inner CV loop.
To maintain consistency with random numbers during parallelisation set the random number seed in the following way:
set.seed(123, "L'Ecuyer-CMRG")
The caret
package is set up for parallelisation using
foreach
(https://topepo.github.io/caret/parallel-processing.html).
We generally do not recommend nested parallelisation of both outer and
inner loops, although this is theoretically feasible if you have enough
cores. If P processors are registered with the parallel
backend, some caret
functionality leads to
P2 processes being generated. We generally find this
does not lead to much speed up once the number of processes reaches the
number of physical cores, as all processors are saturated and there is
both time and memory overheads for duplicating data and packages for
each process.
Repeated nested CV is usually best parallelised over the repeats by
maxing out rep.cores
first, since there is less overhead
due to fewer processes being spawned. You can set cv.cores
as well, but beware this can lead to a large number of threads (the
product of rep.cores
x cv.cores
).
mclapply()
will not request more cores than the number
of elements being parallelised. So if you set n = 3
for 3
repeats, then there is no point setting rep.cores
>= 4
as only 3 processes will be spawned across the repeats. Similarly if you
do 10x10-fold nested CV, there is no point setting cv.cores
>= 11 as only 10 processes can be spawned across the outer CV folds.
So if you are doing low numbers of repeats (e.g. 3-5), then it may be
slightly faster to set cv.cores
to its maximum instead.
Parallelisation is generally fastest if the total number of cores requested is limited to the number of physical cores or just slightly above this, e.g. requesting a total of 8-10 cores on a CPU with 8 physical cores. To check the number of physical cores, use:
parallel::detectCores(logical = FALSE)
A key problem with parallelisation in R is that errors, warnings and
user input have to be suppressed during multicore processing, except in
Rstudio which allows some special printing to the console. If a
nestedcv
call is not working, we recommend that you try it
with cv.cores=1
first to check it starts up without error
messages.
If you use this package, please cite as:
Lewis MJ, Spiliopoulou A, Goldmann K, Pitzalis C, McKeigue P, Barnes MR (2023). nestedcv: an R package for fast implementation of nested cross-validation with embedded feature selection designed for transcriptomics and high dimensional data. Bioinformatics Advances. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioadv/vbad048
Chawla, NV, Bowyer KW, Hall LO, Kegelmeyer WP. Smote: Synthetic minority over-sampling technique. Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research 2002; 16:321-357
Humby F, Durez P, Buch MH, Lewis MJ et al. Rituximab versus tocilizumab in anti-TNF inadequate responder patients with rheumatoid arthritis (R4RA): 16-week outcomes of a stratified, biopsy-driven, multicentre, open-label, phase 4 randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2021; 397(10271):305-317. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(20)32341-2
Kuhn, M. Building Predictive Models in R Using the caret Package. Journal of Statistical Software 2008; 28(5):1-26.
Rivellese F, Surace AEA, Goldmann K, et al, Lewis MJ, Pitzalis C and the R4RA collaborative group. Rituximab versus tocilizumab in rheumatoid arthritis: Synovial biopsy-based biomarker analysis of the phase 4 R4RA randomized trial. Nature medicine 2022; 28(6):1256-1268. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-022-01789-0
Vabalas A, Gowen E, Poliakoff E, Casson AJ. Machine learning algorithm validation with a limited sample size. PloS one 2019;14(11):e0224365.
Zou, H, Hastie, T. Regularization and variable selection via the elastic net. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology) 2005; 67(2): 301-320.