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A fast, effective data attribution method for neural networks in PyTorch

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TRAK: Attributing Model Behavior at Scale

[docs & tutorials] [blog post] [website]

In our paper, we introduce a new data attribution method called TRAK (Tracing with the Randomly-Projected After Kernel). Using TRAK, you can make accurate counterfactual predictions (e.g., answers to questions of the form “what would happen to this prediction if these examples are removed from the training set?"). Computing data attribution with TRAK is 2-3 orders of magnitude cheaper than comparably effective methods, e.g., see our evaluation on:

Main figure

Usage

Check our docs for more detailed examples and tutorials on how to use TRAK. Below, we provide a brief blueprint of using TRAK's API to compute attribution scores.

Make a TRAKer instance

from trak import TRAKer

model, checkpoints = ...
train_loader = ...

traker = TRAKer(model=model, task='image_classification', train_set_size=...)

Compute TRAK features on training data

for model_id, checkpoint in enumerate(checkpoints):
  traker.load_checkpoint(checkpoint, model_id=model_id)
  for batch in loader_train:
      # batch should be a tuple of inputs and labels
      traker.featurize(batch=batch, ...)
traker.finalize_features()

Compute TRAK scores for target examples

targets_loader = ...

for model_id, checkpoint in enumerate(checkpoints):
  traker.start_scoring_checkpoint(checkpoint,
                                  model_id=model_id,
                                  exp_name='test',
                                  num_targets=...)
  for batch in targets_loader:
    traker.score(batch=batch, ...)

scores = traker.finalize_scores(exp_name='test')

Then, you can use the compute TRAK scores to analyze your model's behavior. For example, here are the most (positively and negatively) impactful examples for a ResNet18 model trained on ImageNet for three targets from the ImageNet validation set: ImageNet Figure

Check out the quickstart for a complete ready-to-run example notebook. You can also find several end-to-end examples in the examples/ directory.

Contributing

We welcome contributions to this project! Please see our contributing guidelines for more information.

Citation

If you use this code in your work, please cite using the following BibTeX entry:

@inproceedings{park2023trak,
  title = {TRAK: Attributing Model Behavior at Scale},
  author = {Sung Min Park and Kristian Georgiev and Andrew Ilyas and Guillaume Leclerc and Aleksander Madry},
  booktitle = {International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML)},
  year = {2023}
}

Installation

To install the version of our package which contains a fast, custom CUDA kernel for the JL projection step, use

pip install traker[fast]

You will need compatible versions of gcc and CUDA toolkit to install it. See the installation FAQs for tips regarding this. To install the basic version of our package that requires no compilation, use

pip install traker

Questions?

Please send an email to [email protected]

Maintainers

Kristian Georgiev
Andrew Ilyas
Sung Min Park

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Trak" Project. README Source: MadryLab/trak
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