AutoMLSearch for time series problems¶
In this guide, we’ll show how you can use EvalML to perform an automated search of machine learning pipelines for time series problems. Time series support is still being actively developed in EvalML so expect this page to improve over time.
But first, what is a time series?¶
A time series is a series of measurements taken at different moments in time (Wikipedia). The main difference between a time series dataset and a normal dataset is that the rows of a time series dataset are ordered with time. This relationship between the rows does not exist in non-time series datasets. In a non-time-series dataset, you can shuffle the rows and the dataset still has the same meaning. If you shuffle the rows of a time series dataset, the relationship between the rows is completely different!
What does AutoMLSearch for time series do?¶
In a machine learning setting, we are usually interested in using past values of the time series to predict future values. That is what EvalML’s time series functionality is built to do.
Loading the data¶
In this guide, we work with daily minimum temperature recordings from Melbourne, Austrailia from the beginning of 1981 to end of 1990.
We start by loading the temperature data into two splits. The first split will be a training split consisting of data from 1981 to end of 1989. This is the data we’ll use to find the best pipeline with AutoML. The second split will be a testing split consisting of data from 1990. This is the split we’ll use to evaluate how well our pipeline generalizes on unseen data.
[1]:
from evalml.demos import load_weather
X, y = load_weather()
Number of Features
Categorical 1
Number of training examples: 3650
Targets
10.0 1.40%
11.0 1.40%
13.0 1.32%
12.5 1.21%
10.5 1.21%
...
0.2 0.03%
24.0 0.03%
25.2 0.03%
22.7 0.03%
21.6 0.03%
Name: Temp, Length: 229, dtype: object
[2]:
train_dates, test_dates = X.Date < "1990-01-01", X.Date >= "1990-01-01"
X_train, y_train = X.ww.loc[train_dates], y.ww.loc[train_dates]
X_test, y_test = X.ww.loc[test_dates], y.ww.loc[test_dates]
Visualizing the training set¶
[3]:
import plotly.graph_objects as go
[4]:
data = [
go.Scatter(
x=X_train["Date"],
y=y_train,
mode="lines+markers",
name="Temperature (C)",
line=dict(color="#1f77b4"),
)
]
# Let plotly pick the best date format.
layout = go.Layout(
title={"text": "Min Daily Temperature, Melbourne 1980-1989"},
xaxis={"title": "Time"},
yaxis={"title": "Temperature (C)"},
)
go.Figure(data=data, layout=layout)
Running AutoMLSearch¶
AutoMLSearch
for time series problems works very similarly to the other problem types with the exception that users need to pass in a new parameter called problem_configuration
.
The problem_configuration
is a dictionary specifying the following values:
forecast_horizon: The number of time periods we are trying to forecast. In this example, we’re interested in predicting weather for the next 7 days, so the value is 7.
gap: The number of time periods between the end of the training set and the start of the test set. For example, in our case we are interested in predicting the weather for the next 7 days with the data as it is “today”, so the gap is 0. However, if we had to predict the weather for next Monday-Sunday with the data as it was on the previous Friday, the gap would be 2 (Saturday and Sunday separate Monday from Friday). It is important to select a value that matches the realistic delay between the forecast date and the most recently avaliable data that can be used to make that forecast.
max_delay: The maximum number of rows to look in the past from the current row in order to compute features. In our example, we’ll say we can use the previous week’s weather to predict the current week’s.
date_index: The column of the training dataset that contains the date corresponding to each observation. Currently, this parameter is only used by some time-series specific models so in this example, we are passing in
None
.
Note that the values of these parameters must be in the same units as the training/testing data.
Visualization of forecast horizon and gap¶
[5]:
from evalml.automl import AutoMLSearch
automl = AutoMLSearch(X_train, y_train, problem_type="time series regression",
max_batches=1,
problem_configuration={"gap": 0, "max_delay": 7,
"forecast_horizon": 7, "date_index": None},
allowed_model_families=["xgboost", "random_forest", "linear_model", "extra_trees",
"decision_tree"]
)
/home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/feature-labs-inc-evalml/envs/v0.37.0/lib/python3.8/site-packages/evalml/automl/automl_search.py:460: UserWarning:
Time series support in evalml is still in beta, which means we are still actively building its core features. Please be mindful of that when running search().
[6]:
automl.search()
/home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/feature-labs-inc-evalml/envs/v0.37.0/lib/python3.8/site-packages/sklearn/linear_model/_coordinate_descent.py:530: ConvergenceWarning:
Objective did not converge. You might want to increase the number of iterations. Duality gap: 4089.2442387031147, tolerance: 1.701286028465347
/home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/feature-labs-inc-evalml/envs/v0.37.0/lib/python3.8/site-packages/sklearn/linear_model/_coordinate_descent.py:530: ConvergenceWarning:
Objective did not converge. You might want to increase the number of iterations. Duality gap: 7638.417351298428, tolerance: 2.9630934475138133
/home/docs/checkouts/readthedocs.org/user_builds/feature-labs-inc-evalml/envs/v0.37.0/lib/python3.8/site-packages/sklearn/linear_model/_coordinate_descent.py:530: ConvergenceWarning:
Objective did not converge. You might want to increase the number of iterations. Duality gap: 11061.119581322879, tolerance: 4.09238672
Understanding what happened under the hood¶
This is great, AutoMLSearch
is able to find a pipeline that scores an R2 value of 0.44 compared to a baseline pipeline that is only able to score 0.07. But how did it do that?
Data Splitting¶
EvalML uses rolling origin cross validation for time series problems. Basically, we take successive cuts of the training data while keeping the validation set size fixed. Note that the splits are not separated by gap
number of units. This is because we need access to all the data to generate features for every row of the validation set. However, the feature engineering done by our pipelines respects the gap
value. This is explained more in
the feature engineering section.
Baseline Pipeline¶
The most naive thing we can do in a time series problem is use the most recently available observation to predict the next observation. In our example, this means we’ll use the measurement from 7
days ago as the prediction for the current date.
[7]:
import pandas as pd
baseline = automl.get_pipeline(0)
baseline.fit(X_train, y_train)
naive_baseline_preds = baseline.predict_in_sample(X_test, y_test, objective=None,
X_train=X_train, y_train=y_train)
expected_preds = pd.concat([y_train.iloc[-7:], y_test]).shift(7).iloc[7:]
pd.testing.assert_series_equal(expected_preds, naive_baseline_preds)
Feature Engineering¶
EvalML uses the values of gap
, forecast_horizon
, and max_delay
to calculate a “window” of allowed dates that can be used for engineering the features of each row in the validation/test set. The formula for computing the bounds of the window is:
[t - (max_delay + forecast_horizon + gap), t - (forecast_horizon + gap)]
As an example, this is what the features for the first five days of August would look like in our current problem:
The estimator then takes these features to generate predictions:
Feature engineering components for time series¶
For an example of a time-series feature engineering component see DelayedFeatureTransformer
Evaluate best pipeline on test data¶
Now that we have covered the mechanics of how EvalML runs AutoMLSearch for time series pipelines, we can compare the performance on the test set of the best pipeline found during search and the baseline pipeline.
[8]:
pl = automl.best_pipeline
pl.fit(X_train, y_train)
best_pipeline_score = pl.score(X_test, y_test, ['R2'], X_train, y_train)['R2']
[9]:
best_pipeline_score
[9]:
0.5502791890460579
[10]:
baseline = automl.get_pipeline(0)
baseline.fit(X_train, y_train)
naive_baseline_score = baseline.score(X_test, y_test, ['R2'], X_train, y_train)['R2']
[11]:
naive_baseline_score
[11]:
0.14924457197371788
The pipeline found by AutoMLSearch has a 268% improvement over the naive forecast!
[12]:
automl.objective.calculate_percent_difference(best_pipeline_score, naive_baseline_score)
[12]:
268.7096835541615
Visualize the predictions over time¶
[13]:
from evalml.model_understanding import graph_prediction_vs_actual_over_time
fig = graph_prediction_vs_actual_over_time(pl, X_test, y_test, X_train, y_train, dates=X_test['Date'])
fig
Predicting on unseen data¶
You’ll notice that in the code snippets here, we use the predict_in_sample
pipeline method as opposed to the usual predict
method. What’s the difference?
predict_in_sample
is used when the target value is known on the dates we are predicting on. This is true in cross validation. This method has an expectedy
parameter so that we can compute features using previous target values for all of the observations on the holdout set.predict
is used when the target value is not known, e.g. the test dataset. The y parameter is not expected as only the target is observed in the training set. The test dataset must be separated bygap
days from the training dataset. For the moment, the test set size must matchforecast_horizon
.
Here is an example of these two methods in action:
predict_in_sample¶
[14]:
pl.predict_in_sample(X_test, y_test, objective=None, X_train=X_train, y_train=y_train)
[14]:
3285 14.222870
3286 14.278846
3287 14.022847
3288 13.738781
3289 13.530056
...
3645 14.148007
3646 13.927396
3647 14.022316
3648 14.045560
3649 13.694097
Name: Temp, Length: 365, dtype: float64
predict¶
[15]:
pl.predict(X_test.iloc[:pl.forecast_horizon], objective=None, X_train=X_train, y_train=y_train)
[15]:
3285 14.222870
3286 14.278846
3287 14.022847
3288 13.738781
3289 13.530056
3290 13.988278
3291 13.638807
Name: Temp, dtype: float64