Fast, memory efficient Multiple Imputation by Chained Equations (MICE) with lightgbm. The R version of this package may be found here.
miceforest
was designed to be:
- Fast
- Uses lightgbm as a backend
- Has efficient mean matching solutions.
- Can utilize GPU training
- Flexible
- Can impute pandas dataframes
- Handles categorical data automatically
- Fits into a sklearn pipeline
- User can customize every aspect of the imputation process
- Production Ready
- Can impute new, unseen datasets quickly
- Kernels are efficiently compressed during saving and loading
- Data can be imputed in place to save memory
- Can build models on non-missing data
This document contains a thorough walkthrough of the package, benchmarks, and an introduction to multiple imputation. More information on MICE can be found in Stef van Buuren’s excellent online book, which you can find here.
This package can be installed using either pip or conda, through conda-forge:
# Using pip
$ pip install miceforest --no-cache-dir
# Using conda
$ conda install -c conda-forge miceforest
You can also download the latest development version from this
repository. If you want to install from github with conda, you must
first run conda install pip git
.
$ pip install git+https://github.com/AnotherSamWilson/miceforest.git
miceforest has 2 main classes which the user will interact with:
ImputationKernel
- This class contains the raw data off of which the
mice
algorithm is performed. During this process, models will be trained, and the imputed (predicted) values will be stored. These values can be used to fill in the missing values of the raw data. The raw data can be copied, or referenced directly. Models can be saved, and used to impute new datasets.
- This class contains the raw data off of which the
ImputedData
- The result of
ImputationKernel.impute_new_data(new_data)
. This contains the raw data innew_data
as well as the imputed values.
- The result of
We will be looking at a few simple examples of imputation. We need to load the packages, and define the data:
import miceforest as mf
from sklearn.datasets import load_iris
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
# Load data and introduce missing values
iris = pd.concat(load_iris(as_frame=True,return_X_y=True),axis=1)
iris.rename({"target": "species"}, inplace=True, axis=1)
iris['species'] = iris['species'].astype('category')
iris_amp = mf.ampute_data(iris,perc=0.25,random_state=1991)
If you only want to create a single imputed dataset, you can use
ImputationKernel
with some default settings:
# Create kernel.
kds = mf.ImputationKernel(
iris_amp,
random_state=1991
)
# Run the MICE algorithm for 2 iterations
kds.mice(2)
# Return the completed dataset.
iris_complete = kds.complete_data()
There are also an array of plotting functions available, these are discussed below in the section Diagnostic Plotting.
We usually don’t want to impute just a single dataset. In statistics,
multiple imputation is a process by which the uncertainty/other effects
caused by missing values can be examined by creating multiple different
imputed datasets.
ImputationKernel
can contain an arbitrary number of different datasets, all of which have
gone through mutually exclusive imputation processes:
# Create kernel.
kernel = mf.ImputationKernel(
iris_amp,
num_datasets=4,
random_state=1
)
# Run the MICE algorithm for 2 iterations on each of the datasets
kernel.mice(2)
# Printing the kernel will show you some high level information.
print(kernel)
Class: ImputationKernel
Datasets: 4
Iterations: 2
Data Samples: 150
Data Columns: 5
Imputed Variables: 5
Modeled Variables: 5
All Iterations Saved: True
After we have run mice, we can obtain our completed dataset directly from the kernel:
completed_dataset = kernel.complete_data(dataset=2)
print(completed_dataset.isnull().sum(0))
sepal length (cm) 0
sepal width (cm) 0
petal length (cm) 0
petal width (cm) 0
species 0
dtype: int64
Parameters can be passed directly to lightgbm in several different ways.
Parameters you wish to apply globally to every model can simply be
passed as kwargs to mice
:
# Run the MICE algorithm for 1 more iteration on the kernel with new parameters
kernel.mice(iterations=1, n_estimators=50)
You can also pass pass variable-specific arguments to
variable_parameters
in mice. For instance, let’s say you noticed the
imputation of the [species]
column was taking a little longer, because
it is multiclass. You could decrease the n_estimators specifically for
that column with:
# Run the MICE algorithm for 2 more iterations on the kernel
kernel.mice(
iterations=1,
variable_parameters={'species': {'n_estimators': 25}},
n_estimators=50
)
# Let's get the actual models for these variables:
species_model = kernel.get_model(dataset=0,variable="species")
sepalwidth_model = kernel.get_model(dataset=0,variable="sepal width (cm)")
print(
f"""Species used {str(species_model.params["num_iterations"])} iterations
Sepal Width used {str(sepalwidth_model.params["num_iterations"])} iterations
"""
)
Species used 25 iterations
Sepal Width used 50 iterations
In this scenario, any parameters specified in variable_parameters
takes presidence over the kwargs.
Since we can pass any parameters we want to LightGBM, we can completely customize how our models are built. That includes how the data should be modeled. If your data contains count data, or any other data which can be parameterized by lightgbm, you can simply specify that variable to be modeled with the corresponding objective function.
For example, let’s pretend sepal width (cm)
is a count field which can
be parameterized by a Poisson distribution. Let’s also change our
boosting method to gradient boosted trees:
# Create kernel.
cust_kernel = mf.ImputationKernel(
iris_amp,
num_datasets=1,
random_state=1
)
cust_kernel.mice(
iterations=1,
variable_parameters={'sepal width (cm)': {'objective': 'poisson'}},
boosting = 'gbdt',
min_sum_hessian_in_leaf=0.01
)
Other nice parameters like monotone_constraints
can also be passed.
Setting the parameter device: 'gpu'
will utilize GPU learning, if
LightGBM is set up to do this on your machine.
Note: It is probably a good idea to read this section first, to get some context on how mean matching works.
There are 4 imputation strategies employed by miceforest
:
- Fast Mean Matching: Available only on binary and categorical variables. Chooses a class randomly based on the predicted probabilities output by lightgbm.
- Normal Mean Matching: Employs mean matching as described in the section below.
- Shap Mean Matching: Runs a nearest neighbor search on the shap values of the bachelor predictions in the shap values of the candidate predictions. Finds the
mean_match_candidates
nearest neighbors, and chooses one randomly as the imputation value. - Value Imputation: Uses the value output by lightgbm as the imputation value. Skips mean matching entirely. To use, set
mean_match_candidates = 0
.
Here is the code required to use each method:
# Create kernel.
cust_kernel = mf.ImputationKernel(
iris_amp,
num_datasets=1,
random_state=1,
mean_match_strategy={
'sepal length (cm)': 'normal',
'sepal width (cm)': 'shap',
'species': 'fast',
},
mean_match_candidates={
'petal length (cm)': 0,
}
)
cust_kernel.mice(
iterations=1,
)
Multiple Imputation can take a long time. If you wish to impute a
dataset using the MICE algorithm, but don’t have time to train new
models, it is possible to impute new datasets using a ImputationKernel
object. The impute_new_data()
function uses the models collected by
ImputationKernel
to perform multiple imputation without updating the
models at each iteration:
# Our 'new data' is just the first 15 rows of iris_amp
from datetime import datetime
# Define our new data as the first 15 rows
new_data = iris_amp.iloc[range(15)].reset_index(drop=True)
start_t = datetime.now()
new_data_imputed = cust_kernel.impute_new_data(new_data=new_data)
print(f"New Data imputed in {(datetime.now() - start_t).total_seconds()} seconds")
New Data imputed in 0.040396 seconds
Saving miceforest
kernels is efficient. During the pickling process, the following steps are taken:
- Convert working data to parquet bytes.
- Serialize the kernel.
- Save to a file.
You can save and load the kernel like any other object using pickle
or dill
:
from tempfile import mkstemp
import dill
new_file, filename = mkstemp()
with open(filename, "wb") as f:
dill.dump(kernel, f)
with open(filename, "rb") as f:
kernel_from_pickle = dill.load(f)
miceforest
kernels can be fit into sklearn pipelines to impute training and scoring
datasets:
import numpy as np
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler
from sklearn.datasets import make_classification
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline
import miceforest as mf
kernel = mf.ImputationKernel(iris_amp, num_datasets=1, random_state=1)
pipe = Pipeline([
('impute', kernel),
('scaler', StandardScaler()),
])
# The pipeline can be used as any other estimator
# and avoids leaking the test set into the train set
X_train_t = pipe.fit_transform(
X=iris_amp,
y=None,
impute__iterations=2
)
X_test_t = pipe.transform(new_data)
# Show that neither now have missing values.
assert not np.any(np.isnan(X_train_t))
assert not np.any(np.isnan(X_test_t))
The MICE process itself is used to impute missing data in a dataset.
However, sometimes a variable can be fully recognized in the training
data, but needs to be imputed later on in a different dataset. It is
possible to train models to impute variables even if they have no
missing values by specifying them in the variable_schema
parameter.
In this case, variable_schema
is treated as the list of variables
to train models on.
# Set petal length (cm) in our amputed data
# to original values with no missing data.
iris_amp['sepal width (cm)'] = iris['sepal width (cm)'].copy()
iris_amp.isnull().sum()
sepal length (cm) 37
sepal width (cm) 0
petal length (cm) 37
petal width (cm) 37
species 37
dtype: int64
kernel = mf.ImputationKernel(
data=iris_amp,
variable_schema=iris_amp.columns.to_list(),
num_datasets=1,
random_state=1,
)
kernel.mice(1)
# Remember, the dataset we are imputing does have
# missing values in the sepal width (cm) column
new_data.isnull().sum()
sepal length (cm) 4
sepal width (cm) 3
petal length (cm) 1
petal width (cm) 3
species 3
dtype: int64
new_data_imp = kernel.impute_new_data(new_data)
new_data_imp = new_data_imp.complete_data()
# All columns have been imputed.
new_data_imp.isnull().sum()
sepal length (cm) 0
sepal width (cm) 0
petal length (cm) 0
petal width (cm) 0
species 0
dtype: int64
miceforest
allows you to tune the parameters on a kernel dataset.
These parameters can then be used to build the models in future
iterations of mice. In its most simple invocation, you can just call the
function with the desired optimization steps:
optimal_params = kernel.tune_parameters(
dataset=0,
use_gbdt=True,
num_iterations=500,
random_state=1,
)
kernel.mice(1, variable_parameters=optimal_params)
pd.DataFrame(optimal_params)
sepal length (cm) | petal length (cm) | petal width (cm) | species | |
---|---|---|---|---|
boosting | gbdt | gbdt | gbdt | gbdt |
data_sample_strategy | bagging | bagging | bagging | bagging |
num_iterations | 142 | 248 | 262 | 172 |
max_depth | 4 | 4 | 5 | 5 |
num_leaves | 12 | 17 | 2 | 19 |
min_data_in_leaf | 2 | 2 | 15 | 5 |
min_sum_hessian_in_leaf | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 |
min_gain_to_split | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
bagging_fraction | 0.580973 | 0.501521 | 0.586709 | 0.795465 |
feature_fraction_bynode | 0.922566 | 0.299912 | 0.503182 | 0.237637 |
bagging_freq | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
verbosity | -1 | -1 | -1 | -1 |
learning_rate | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
objective | regression | regression | regression | multiclass |
num_class | NaN | NaN | NaN | 3 |
This will perform 10 fold cross validation on random samples of parameters. By default, all variables models are tuned.
The parameter tuning is pretty flexible. If you wish to set some model
parameters static, or to change the bounds that are searched in, you can
simply pass this information to either the variable_parameters
parameter, **kwbounds
, or both:
optimal_params = kernel.tune_parameters(
dataset=0,
variables = ['sepal width (cm)','species','petal width (cm)'],
variable_parameters = {
'sepal width (cm)': {'bagging_fraction': 0.5},
'species': {'bagging_freq': (5,10)}
},
use_gbdt=True,
optimization_steps=5,
extra_trees = [True, False]
)
kernel.mice(1, variable_parameters=optimal_params)
In this example, we did a few things - we specified that only sepal width (cm)
, species
, and petal width (cm)
should be tuned. We also
specified some specific parameters in variable_parameters
. Notice that
bagging_fraction
was passed as a scalar, 0.5
. This means that, for
the variable sepal width (cm)
, the parameter bagging_fraction
will
be set as that number and not be tuned. We did the opposite for
bagging_freq
. We specified bounds that the process should search in.
We also passed the argument extra_trees
as a list. Since it was passed
to **kwbounds, this parameter will apply to all variables that are
being tuned. Passing values as a list tells the process that it should
randomly sample values from the list, instead of treating them as set of
counts to search within.
Additionally, we set use_gbdt=True
. This switches the process to use
gradient boosted trees, instead of random forests. Typically, gradient
boosted trees will perform better. The optimal num_iterations
is also
determined by early stopping in cross validation.
The tuning process follows these rules for different parameter values it finds:
- Scalar: That value is used, and not tuned.
- Tuple: Should be length 2. Treated as the lower and upper bound to search in.
- List: Treated as a distinct list of values to try randomly.
miceforest
allows for different “levels” of reproducibility, global
and record-level.
Global reproducibility ensures that the same values will be imputed if
the same code is run multiple times. To ensure global reproducibility,
all the user needs to do is set a random_state
when the kernel is
initialized.
Sometimes we want to obtain reproducible imputations at the record
level, without having to pass the same dataset. This is possible by
passing a list of record-specific seeds to the random_seed_array
parameter. This is useful if imputing new data multiple times, and you
would like imputations for each row to match each time it is imputed.
# Define seeds for the data, and impute iris
import numpy as np
random_seed_array = np.random.randint(0, 9999, size=iris_amp.shape[0], dtype='uint32')
iris_imputed = kernel.impute_new_data(
iris_amp,
random_state=4,
random_seed_array=random_seed_array
)
# Select a random sample
new_inds = np.random.choice(150, size=15)
new_data = iris_amp.loc[new_inds].reset_index(drop=True)
new_seeds = random_seed_array[new_inds]
new_imputed = kernel.impute_new_data(
new_data,
random_state=4,
random_seed_array=new_seeds
)
# We imputed the same values for the 15 values each time,
# because each record was associated with the same seed.
assert new_imputed.complete_data(0).equals(
iris_imputed.complete_data(0).loc[new_inds].reset_index(drop=True)
)
Multiple Imputation is one of the most robust ways to handle missing data - but it can take a long time. There are several strategies you can use to decrease the time a process takes to run:
- Decrease
data_subset
. By default all non-missing datapoints for each variable are used to train the model and perform mean matching. This can cause the model training nearest-neighbors search to take a long time for large data. A subset of these points can be searched instead by usingdata_subset
. - If categorical columns are taking a long time, you can set
mean_match_strategy="fast"
. You can also set different parameters specifically for categorical columns, like smallerbagging_fraction
ornum_iterations
, or try grouping the categories before they are imputed. Model training time for categorical variables is linear with the number of distinct categories. - Decrease
mean_match_candidates
. The maximum number of neighbors that are considered with the default parameters is 10. However, for large datasets, this can still be an expensive operation. Consider explicitly settingmean_match_candidates
lower. Settingmean_match_candidates=0
will skip mean matching entirely, and just use the lightgbm predictions as the imputation values. - Use different lightgbm parameters. lightgbm is usually not the problem, however if a certain variable has a large number of classes, then the max number of trees actually grown is (# classes) * (n_estimators). You can specifically decrease the bagging fraction or n_estimators for large multi-class variables, or grow less trees in general.
It is possible to run the entire process without copying the dataset. If
copy_data=False
, then the data is referenced directly:
kernel_inplace = mf.ImputationKernel(
iris_amp,
num_datasets=1,
copy_data=False,
random_state=1,
)
kernel_inplace.mice(2)
Note, that this probably won’t (but could) change the original dataset
in undesirable ways. Throughout the mice
procedure, imputed values are
stored directly in the original data. At the end, the missing values are
put back as np.NaN
.
We can also complete our original data in place. This is useful if the dataset is large, and copies can’t be made in memory:
kernel_inplace.complete_data(dataset=0, inplace=True)
print(iris_amp.isnull().sum(0))
sepal length (cm) 0
sepal width (cm) 0
petal length (cm) 0
petal width (cm) 0
species 0
dtype: int64
As of now, there are 2 diagnostic plot available. More coming soon!
kernel.plot_feature_importance(dataset=0)
kernel.plot_imputed_distributions()
To return the imputed data simply use the complete_data
method:
dataset_1 = kernel.complete_data(0)
This will return a single specified dataset. Multiple datasets are typically created so that some measure of confidence around each prediction can be created.
Since we know what the original data looked like, we can cheat and see how well the imputations compare to the original data:
acclist = []
iterations = kernel.iteration_count()+1
for iteration in range(iterations):
species_na_count = kernel.na_counts['species']
compdat = kernel.complete_data(dataset=0,iteration=iteration)
# Record the accuract of the imputations of species.
acclist.append(
round(1-sum(compdat['species'] != iris['species'])/species_na_count,2)
)
# acclist shows the accuracy of the imputations over the iterations.
acclist = pd.Series(acclist).rename("Species Imputation Accuracy")
acclist.index = range(iterations)
acclist.index.name = "Iteration"
acclist
Iteration
0 0.35
1 0.81
2 0.81
3 0.78
Name: Species Imputation Accuracy, dtype: float64
In this instance, we went from a low accuracy (what is expected with random sampling) to a much higher accuracy.
Multiple Imputation by Chained Equations ‘fills in’ (imputes) missing data in a dataset through an iterative series of predictive models. In each iteration, each specified variable in the dataset is imputed using the other variables in the dataset. These iterations should be run until it appears that convergence has been met.
This process is continued until all specified variables have been imputed. Additional iterations can be run if it appears that the average imputed values have not converged, although no more than 5 iterations are usually necessary.
MICE is particularly useful if missing values are associated with the target variable in a way that introduces leakage. For instance, let’s say you wanted to model customer retention at the time of sign up. A certain variable is collected at sign up or 1 month after sign up. The absence of that variable is a data leak, since it tells you that the customer did not retain for 1 month.
Information is often collected at different stages of a ‘funnel’. MICE can be used to make educated guesses about the characteristics of entities at different points in a funnel.
MICE can be used to impute missing values, however it is important to keep in mind that these imputed values are a prediction. Creating multiple datasets with different imputed values allows you to do two types of inference:
- Imputed Value Distribution: A profile can be built for each imputed value, allowing you to make statements about the likely distribution of that value.
- Model Prediction Distribution: With multiple datasets, you can build multiple models and create a distribution of predictions for each sample. Those samples with imputed values which were not able to be imputed with much confidence would have a larger variance in their predictions.
miceforest
can make use of a procedure called predictive mean matching
(PMM) to select which values are imputed. PMM involves selecting a
datapoint from the original, nonmissing data (candidates) which has a
predicted value close to the predicted value of the missing sample
(bachelors). The closest N (mean_match_candidates
parameter) values
are selected, from which a value is chosen at random. This can be
specified on a column-by-column basis. Going into more detail from our
example above, we see how this works in practice:
This method is very useful if you have a variable which needs imputing which has any of the following characteristics:
- Multimodal
- Integer
- Skewed
As an example, let’s construct a dataset with some of the above characteristics:
randst = np.random.RandomState(1991)
# random uniform variable
nrws = 1000
uniform_vec = randst.uniform(size=nrws)
def make_bimodal(mean1,mean2,size):
bimodal_1 = randst.normal(size=nrws, loc=mean1)
bimodal_2 = randst.normal(size=nrws, loc=mean2)
bimdvec = []
for i in range(size):
bimdvec.append(randst.choice([bimodal_1[i], bimodal_2[i]]))
return np.array(bimdvec)
# Make 2 Bimodal Variables
close_bimodal_vec = make_bimodal(2,-2,nrws)
far_bimodal_vec = make_bimodal(3,-3,nrws)
# Highly skewed variable correlated with Uniform_Variable
skewed_vec = np.exp(uniform_vec*randst.uniform(size=nrws)*3) + randst.uniform(size=nrws)*3
# Integer variable correlated with Close_Bimodal_Variable and Uniform_Variable
integer_vec = np.round(uniform_vec + close_bimodal_vec/3 + randst.uniform(size=nrws)*2)
# Make a DataFrame
dat = pd.DataFrame(
{
'uniform_var':uniform_vec,
'close_bimodal_var':close_bimodal_vec,
'far_bimodal_var':far_bimodal_vec,
'skewed_var':skewed_vec,
'integer_var':integer_vec
}
)
# Ampute the data.
ampdat = mf.ampute_data(dat,perc=0.25,random_state=randst)
import plotnine as p9
import itertools
def plot_matrix(df, columns):
pdf = []
for a1, b1 in itertools.combinations(columns, 2):
for (a,b) in ((a1, b1), (b1, a1)):
sub = df[[a, b]].rename(columns={a: "x", b: "y"}).assign(a=a, b=b)
pdf.append(sub)
g = (
p9.ggplot(pd.concat(pdf))
+ p9.geom_point(p9.aes('x','y'))
+ p9.facet_grid('b~a', scales='free')
+ p9.theme(figure_size=(7, 7))
+ p9.xlab("") + p9.ylab("")
)
return g
plot_matrix(dat, dat.columns)
We can see how our variables are distributed and correlated in the graph above. Now let’s run our imputation process twice, once using mean matching, and once using the model prediction.
kernel_mean_match = mf.ImputationKernel(
data=ampdat,
num_datasets=3,
mean_match_candidates=5,
random_state=1
)
kernel_mean_match.mice(2)
kernel_no_mean_match = mf.ImputationKernel(
data=ampdat,
num_datasets=3,
mean_match_candidates=0,
random_state=1
)
kernel_no_mean_match.mice(2)
kernel_mean_match.plot_imputed_distributions()
kernel_no_mean_match.plot_imputed_distributions()
You can see the effects that mean matching has, depending on the distribution of the data. Simply returning the value from the model prediction, while it may provide a better ‘fit’, will not provide imputations with a similair distribution to the original. This may be beneficial, depending on your goal.