torch.nn.init¶
Warning
All the functions in this module are intended to be used to initialize neural network
parameters, so they all run in torch.no_grad()
mode and will not be taken into
account by autograd.
- torch.nn.init.calculate_gain(nonlinearity, param=None)[source]¶
Return the recommended gain value for the given nonlinearity function. The values are as follows:
nonlinearity
gain
Linear / Identity
Conv{1,2,3}D
Sigmoid
Tanh
ReLU
Leaky Relu
SELU
Warning
In order to implement Self-Normalizing Neural Networks , you should use
nonlinearity='linear'
instead ofnonlinearity='selu'
. This gives the initial weights a variance of1 / N
, which is necessary to induce a stable fixed point in the forward pass. In contrast, the default gain forSELU
sacrifices the normalization effect for more stable gradient flow in rectangular layers.- Parameters:
nonlinearity – the non-linear function (nn.functional name)
param – optional parameter for the non-linear function
Examples
>>> gain = nn.init.calculate_gain('leaky_relu', 0.2) # leaky_relu with negative_slope=0.2
- torch.nn.init.uniform_(tensor, a=0.0, b=1.0)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values drawn from the uniform distribution .
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.uniform_(w)
- torch.nn.init.normal_(tensor, mean=0.0, std=1.0)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values drawn from the normal distribution .
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.normal_(w)
- torch.nn.init.constant_(tensor, val)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with the value .
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.constant_(w, 0.3)
- torch.nn.init.ones_(tensor)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with the scalar value 1.
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.ones_(w)
- torch.nn.init.zeros_(tensor)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with the scalar value 0.
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.zeros_(w)
- torch.nn.init.eye_(tensor)[source]¶
Fills the 2-dimensional input Tensor with the identity matrix. Preserves the identity of the inputs in Linear layers, where as many inputs are preserved as possible.
- Parameters:
tensor – a 2-dimensional torch.Tensor
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.eye_(w)
- torch.nn.init.dirac_(tensor, groups=1)[source]¶
Fills the {3, 4, 5}-dimensional input Tensor with the Dirac delta function. Preserves the identity of the inputs in Convolutional layers, where as many input channels are preserved as possible. In case of groups>1, each group of channels preserves identity
- Parameters:
tensor – a {3, 4, 5}-dimensional torch.Tensor
groups (int, optional) – number of groups in the conv layer (default: 1)
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 16, 5, 5) >>> nn.init.dirac_(w) >>> w = torch.empty(3, 24, 5, 5) >>> nn.init.dirac_(w, 3)
- torch.nn.init.xavier_uniform_(tensor, gain=1.0)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values according to the method described in Understanding the difficulty of training deep feedforward neural networks - Glorot, X. & Bengio, Y. (2010), using a uniform distribution. The resulting tensor will have values sampled from where
Also known as Glorot initialization.
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.xavier_uniform_(w, gain=nn.init.calculate_gain('relu'))
- torch.nn.init.xavier_normal_(tensor, gain=1.0)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values according to the method described in Understanding the difficulty of training deep feedforward neural networks - Glorot, X. & Bengio, Y. (2010), using a normal distribution. The resulting tensor will have values sampled from where
Also known as Glorot initialization.
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.xavier_normal_(w)
- torch.nn.init.kaiming_uniform_(tensor, a=0, mode='fan_in', nonlinearity='leaky_relu')[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values according to the method described in Delving deep into rectifiers: Surpassing human-level performance on ImageNet classification - He, K. et al. (2015), using a uniform distribution. The resulting tensor will have values sampled from where
Also known as He initialization.
- Parameters:
tensor (Tensor) – an n-dimensional torch.Tensor
a (float) – the negative slope of the rectifier used after this layer (only used with
'leaky_relu'
)mode (str) – either
'fan_in'
(default) or'fan_out'
. Choosing'fan_in'
preserves the magnitude of the variance of the weights in the forward pass. Choosing'fan_out'
preserves the magnitudes in the backwards pass.nonlinearity (str) – the non-linear function (nn.functional name), recommended to use only with
'relu'
or'leaky_relu'
(default).
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.kaiming_uniform_(w, mode='fan_in', nonlinearity='relu')
- torch.nn.init.kaiming_normal_(tensor, a=0, mode='fan_in', nonlinearity='leaky_relu')[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values according to the method described in Delving deep into rectifiers: Surpassing human-level performance on ImageNet classification - He, K. et al. (2015), using a normal distribution. The resulting tensor will have values sampled from where
Also known as He initialization.
- Parameters:
tensor (Tensor) – an n-dimensional torch.Tensor
a (float) – the negative slope of the rectifier used after this layer (only used with
'leaky_relu'
)mode (str) – either
'fan_in'
(default) or'fan_out'
. Choosing'fan_in'
preserves the magnitude of the variance of the weights in the forward pass. Choosing'fan_out'
preserves the magnitudes in the backwards pass.nonlinearity (str) – the non-linear function (nn.functional name), recommended to use only with
'relu'
or'leaky_relu'
(default).
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.kaiming_normal_(w, mode='fan_out', nonlinearity='relu')
- torch.nn.init.trunc_normal_(tensor, mean=0.0, std=1.0, a=- 2.0, b=2.0)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with values drawn from a truncated normal distribution. The values are effectively drawn from the normal distribution with values outside redrawn until they are within the bounds. The method used for generating the random values works best when .
- Parameters:
- Return type:
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.trunc_normal_(w)
- torch.nn.init.orthogonal_(tensor, gain=1)[source]¶
Fills the input Tensor with a (semi) orthogonal matrix, as described in Exact solutions to the nonlinear dynamics of learning in deep linear neural networks - Saxe, A. et al. (2013). The input tensor must have at least 2 dimensions, and for tensors with more than 2 dimensions the trailing dimensions are flattened.
- Parameters:
tensor – an n-dimensional torch.Tensor, where
gain – optional scaling factor
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.orthogonal_(w)
- torch.nn.init.sparse_(tensor, sparsity, std=0.01)[source]¶
Fills the 2D input Tensor as a sparse matrix, where the non-zero elements will be drawn from the normal distribution , as described in Deep learning via Hessian-free optimization - Martens, J. (2010).
- Parameters:
tensor – an n-dimensional torch.Tensor
sparsity – The fraction of elements in each column to be set to zero
std – the standard deviation of the normal distribution used to generate the non-zero values
Examples
>>> w = torch.empty(3, 5) >>> nn.init.sparse_(w, sparsity=0.1)