-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
Copy pathClassification of Cat_or_Dog
242 lines (179 loc) · 7.85 KB
/
Classification of Cat_or_Dog
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
#Classification of Cat and Dog
#wget is used because google colab is built on Debian based Linux OS and it is one of the command used in linux
!wget --no-check-certificate \
https://storage.googleapis.com/mledu-datasets/cats_and_dogs_filtered.zip \
-O /tmp/cats_and_dogs_filtered.zip
import os
import zipfile
local_zip = '/tmp/cats_and_dogs_filtered.zip'
zip_ref = zipfile.ZipFile(local_zip, 'r')
zip_ref.extractall('/tmp')
zip_ref.close()
base_dir = '/tmp/cats_and_dogs_filtered'
train_dir = os.path.join(base_dir, 'train')
validation_dir = os.path.join(base_dir, 'validation')
# Directory with our training cat pictures
train_cats_dir = os.path.join(train_dir, 'cats')
# Directory with our training dog pictures
train_dogs_dir = os.path.join(train_dir, 'dogs')
# Directory with our validation cat pictures
validation_cats_dir = os.path.join(validation_dir, 'cats')
# Directory with our validation dog pictures
validation_dogs_dir = os.path.join(validation_dir, 'dogs')
train_cat_fnames = os.listdir(train_cats_dir)
print(train_cat_fnames[:10])
train_dog_fnames = os.listdir(train_dogs_dir)
train_dog_fnames.sort()
print(train_dog_fnames[:10])
print ('total training cat images:', len(os.listdir(train_cats_dir)))
print ('total training dog images:', len(os.listdir(train_dogs_dir)))
print ('total validation cat images:', len(os.listdir(validation_cats_dir)))
print ('total validation dog images:', len(os.listdir(validation_dogs_dir)))
%matplotlib inline
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import matplotlib.image as mpimg
# Parameters for our graph; we'll output images in a 4x4 configuration
nrows = 4
ncols = 4
# Index for iterating over images
pic_index = 0
# Set up matplotlib fig, and size it to fit 4x4 pics
fig = plt.gcf()
fig.set_size_inches(ncols * 4, nrows * 4)
pic_index += 8
next_cat_pix = [os.path.join(train_cats_dir, fname)
for fname in train_cat_fnames[pic_index-8:pic_index]]
next_dog_pix = [os.path.join(train_dogs_dir, fname)
for fname in train_dog_fnames[pic_index-8:pic_index]]
for i, img_path in enumerate(next_cat_pix+next_dog_pix):
# Set up subplot; subplot indices start at 1
sp = plt.subplot(nrows, ncols, i + 1)
sp.axis('Off') # Don't show axes (or gridlines)
img = mpimg.imread(img_path)
plt.imshow(img)
plt.show()
from tensorflow.keras import layers
from tensorflow.keras import Model
# Our input feature map is 150x150x3: 150x150 for the image pixels, and 3 for
# the three color channels: R, G, and B
img_input = layers.Input(shape=(150, 150, 3))
# First convolution extracts 16 filters that are 3x3
# Convolution is followed by max-pooling layer with a 2x2 window
x = layers.Conv2D(16, 3, activation='relu')(img_input)
x = layers.MaxPooling2D(2)(x)
# Second convolution extracts 32 filters that are 3x3
# Convolution is followed by max-pooling layer with a 2x2 window
x = layers.Conv2D(32, 3, activation='relu')(x)
x = layers.MaxPooling2D(2)(x)
# Third convolution extracts 64 filters that are 3x3
# Convolution is followed by max-pooling layer with a 2x2 window
x = layers.Conv2D(64, 3, activation='relu')(x)
x = layers.MaxPooling2D(2)(x)
# Flatten feature map to a 1-dim tensor so we can add fully connected layers
x = layers.Flatten()(x)
# Create a fully connected layer with ReLU activation and 512 hidden units
x = layers.Dense(512, activation='relu')(x)
# Create output layer with a single node and sigmoid activation
output = layers.Dense(1, activation='sigmoid')(x)
# Create model:
# input = input feature map
# output = input feature map + stacked convolution/maxpooling layers + fully
# connected layer + sigmoid output layer
model = Model(img_input, output)
model.summary()
from tensorflow.keras.optimizers import RMSprop
model.compile(loss='binary_crossentropy',
optimizer=RMSprop(lr=0.001),
metrics=['acc'])
from tensorflow.keras.preprocessing.image import ImageDataGenerator
# All images will be rescaled by 1./255
train_datagen = ImageDataGenerator(rescale=1./255)
test_datagen = ImageDataGenerator(rescale=1./255)
# Flow training images in batches of 20 using train_datagen generator
train_generator = train_datagen.flow_from_directory(
train_dir, # This is the source directory for training images
target_size=(150, 150), # All images will be resized to 150x150
batch_size=20,
# Since we use binary_crossentropy loss, we need binary labels
class_mode='binary')
# Flow validation images in batches of 20 using test_datagen generator
validation_generator = test_datagen.flow_from_directory(
validation_dir,
target_size=(150, 150),
batch_size=20,
class_mode='binary')
history = model.fit_generator(
train_generator,
steps_per_epoch=100, # 2000 images = batch_size * steps
epochs=15,
validation_data=validation_generator,
validation_steps=50, # 1000 images = batch_size * steps
verbose=2)
import numpy as np
import random
from tensorflow.keras.preprocessing.image import img_to_array, load_img
# Let's define a new Model that will take an image as input, and will output
# intermediate representations for all layers in the previous model after
# the first.
successive_outputs = [layer.output for layer in model.layers[1:]]
visualization_model = Model(img_input, successive_outputs)
# Let's prepare a random input image of a cat or dog from the training set.
cat_img_files = [os.path.join(train_cats_dir, f) for f in train_cat_fnames]
dog_img_files = [os.path.join(train_dogs_dir, f) for f in train_dog_fnames]
img_path = random.choice(cat_img_files + dog_img_files)
img = load_img(img_path, target_size=(150, 150)) # this is a PIL image
x = img_to_array(img) # Numpy array with shape (150, 150, 3)
x = x.reshape((1,) + x.shape) # Numpy array with shape (1, 150, 150, 3)
# Rescale by 1/255
x /= 255
# Let's run our image through our network, thus obtaining all
# intermediate representations for this image.
successive_feature_maps = visualization_model.predict(x)
# These are the names of the layers, so can have them as part of our plot
layer_names = [layer.name for layer in model.layers]
# Now let's display our representations
for layer_name, feature_map in zip(layer_names, successive_feature_maps):
if len(feature_map.shape) == 4:
# Just do this for the conv / maxpool layers, not the fully-connected layers
n_features = feature_map.shape[-1] # number of features in feature map
# The feature map has shape (1, size, size, n_features)
size = feature_map.shape[1]
# We will tile our images in this matrix
display_grid = np.zeros((size, size * n_features))
for i in range(n_features):
# Postprocess the feature to make it visually palatable
x = feature_map[0, :, :, i]
x -= x.mean()
x /= x.std()
x *= 64
x += 128
x = np.clip(x, 0, 255).astype('uint8')
# We'll tile each filter into this big horizontal grid
display_grid[:, i * size : (i + 1) * size] = x
# Display the grid
scale = 20. / n_features
plt.figure(figsize=(scale * n_features, scale))
plt.title(layer_name)
plt.grid(False)
plt.imshow(display_grid, aspect='auto', cmap='viridis')
# Retrieve a list of accuracy results on training and test data
# sets for each training epoch
acc = history.history['acc']
val_acc = history.history['val_acc']
# Retrieve a list of list results on training and test data
# sets for each training epoch
loss = history.history['loss']
val_loss = history.history['val_loss']
# Get number of epochs
epochs = range(len(acc))
# Plot training and validation accuracy per epoch
plt.plot(epochs, acc)
plt.plot(epochs, val_acc)
plt.title('Training and validation accuracy')
plt.figure()
# Plot training and validation loss per epoch
plt.plot(epochs, loss)
plt.plot(epochs, val_loss)
plt.title('Training and validation loss')
import os, signal
os.kill(os.getpid(), signal.SIGKILL)